On 
ee, 


fiZbe 
At RY 


vie eay 


fi 
a 


*, 


BUD 


ete 


mie 


heh 
Bae 
Site 


~ 


&, erate iy 


aS) 


es acces 


te 
tae 


* 


Be ay: ot Kak ive 
: ain Thy 8 


Pd BS ARN 


‘ 


ige of ne ace ah 
le last night's: 


“Israels, sare ‘for | 
“Th 


ardener’s 
on Felix: 


Cae 


Dire eeeeee: 


forthe iu Fale Worma; HG. 


SWodeooa, ‘Thoma ie bela wees 6 bale 


ca, Thomas Moran, N. A.} 
pie ha eS eserw ce eeere 


‘Jehan. Georges Vibert; L. A. 


vi cevaedeeecsatadsryessesteres 


ht; ————- . -- 
eorges Vibert; 
| ia) opine co. 
tig ‘y, M. Dudley. wearer 
; ‘Camille Corot; Knoedler 
‘- “Aasise “Grigon: §. PB. Avery. 
Ludwig Friedrich Peer, Mrs. 
ini ‘ ‘Charles: Emile Jacque; 
her; “Gross”... ss. 
to. Work, ‘Emile Jean 
Rapid Transit om L, Henry, N.A.; 
: Westchester. “Wordsworts * 'Thomp— 
‘H. Robinson......- 330 
= Alberto Pasini; Knoedler. & Co. 2,250 
Mone shablon; J, B. RINT e si s.0 ss Sib ie 1,250 
Canal, Thomas Moran, N, Ay CL ony 
Ee Bascal nbomnas 


aaecetnere Be tat ee 


ardo, pritz Thaulew; G. H. B. 


re an Staamiany 2 

* w i | . Watson... 

Pinca ee artin eto od: Be oP 1,950 
epa t Rouen, C. Delort; J. De W. 

i Harpignies; sree sci: 3, 

we yon W. leona orsiahh; G..G, 

a Paul Jean Clay $; “WGrose’’. ss... 

Professor Thelm Kray; Mrs. 


Puc snark teats sms esdte Ss 


ee ee ee 


a ae 


oe ke ey 


875 
600" 


4 


ot igo 
hele ee texte) 
oh hy te ad 
© +s 
2,8 he: sey 
we Meee 
Cue. oe 
Sere a) 
Par : > 
a ** Bi test 
- 1B 


~Dupr 
NLA 


Tl 
Moran, 
id Teniers the 


urdént, Ju 
Dav 


ex 0: 


y of the 
: Ran 
Village Kirmess, 


“*Bernett!” 


6 Vall 
Teton 


The 


& 


7t4 


neh 


José Do 


wee 


ne Love Sons, 


The Sheerpcote 


Interior, 


ern gg 


oe 


Eugene Jose 
I< 


seee 


as 


hoven; 


Ww purer at 
ee 
. Cidetts 


1,400 
. 1,000 
BBO 


e Hendrik’ Willem Mesdag’; 


Scheveningen, 


@ Madrazo; G. W. 


*. 
wee sce eee te coos eve ® 


Felix ISMANssscoce 


ie el 


as 


eee 

> 
. 
s 


* 


yer, Raimundo 4 


ae ce ope 


ing Rick, Jules I 


Sie Burn! 


a eee 
veo wnnrecre 


ning Pre 


| Works Gath | 
ered by Five 
rs Bring $35,155. 


27 genes paintings belonging 


mm, M. Tanenbaum, 
feh bach, L. A. Biddle 
r Steers drew a large: 
© Mendelssohn Hall last. night 
was brisk. With ' ‘Thomas: 


s i on. 
pay cen paintings were : 


E $35,155 


price paid was $3,000, given 
2 asa for “Old Ruins, a 


ee ores will: is sold. &§ 
Those > ‘that. 


bo 
Or peace jen ae follows: | 
re Joseph Verboeckhoven; 


: Perrier; R A. Rai 
tantinopie,” ‘Aiberto 


a 


jephorus, a 


A ite it icin: & singer 


Ceo. | 


J obnson, ui 
Ais Pasint;’ oC cy: 


f 


MODERN PAINTINGS SELL WELL 


Fi Total. of 874 050 for 137 Works—Top 
Price for a Sehreyer. 


. Thomas I. Kirby of the American Art 
Association last night concluded at Mendels- 


sobhn Hall before a large and appreciative 
audience the sale of 137 modern paintings, 
the property of P. A. Schemm, M. Tanen- 
baum, W. SalomongaS@ Mehrbach, Li. A. 
Biddle and the late Wenry Steers. 

‘The total for a wening’s sale was $74,950. 
‘This, with the total of $35,155 from Thursday 
night’s sale, makes a grand total of $110, 105, 
less, however, about $1,200 loss on five paint- 
ings which, owing tomisunderstandings, had 
‘to be sold a second time last night. 


Vibert: L 


“The Glade, 
“sheep-—Near Ponieinentedaes 


ere Friday nee: avisonreyar’ — 
the top price. This was $5,600, for “The 
Retreat,” paid by ©. I, Hi oe It was 
‘the highest figure of the. sa Two Josef — 
Israels brought $4,700 and¢s 266 from private. 


‘buyers. Another Seti reyer, “The Recon- 
Naisance,” went 
“The Scout,” b a which was bought 
by an agent f' 2,450 on Friday however, 
brought only $1,750 from H. Stiefel in its 
resale. 

Andrew Freedman was among the buyers, 
taking a view of sheep near Fontainebleau, 
ry Jacque, for $2,500, and “The Nymph,” 
iby J. R. Bayschlag, for $199. The pictures — 
which brought oe or over last night follow: — 


“The Weeping cee ” Jean Jacques 
" peng? Mrs. Wi Niams rae 


“Dasinl; We ff. Smith 
\“Moorish Market Place,” Alberto Pasinl; 
Lb  Doote 3&\Sonses ee A oid b's sil «Meese Realy eae 
“Cattle,” Marie Dieterle: R. H- Vibarhte 
“Landscape,” E.s Oi ‘Perrier; J- Bs Cobb.. 
"Fhe Departure of Night,” Jean: Ob harles Cazin; 
Knoedler & Co 2 
“The Departure for the Hunt,” Jules Worms; 
He yOySelxesi’ aig SO Ou milo oe aa 
“The cere, Courtyard, "Jehan Georges 
. A. Lauthier 
“The pty aera Botquet,” Jehan Georges: 
t 


_Viber iD 
<,” Charles Emite Jacque : 
Garden,” Jean Charles Cazin: J. Me 


Pd Baptiste Camile Corot 
Charles mile 


- Knoedier & 


Jacque; cae tel CO earns 
‘he Dreamer,” 


Jan Monchablon; J. B peat 
d Canal,” Thomas Moran, N. A.; 
SOE EER tren Cates Sn Mines Wrens 
tes) Venice,” Martin: Rico; 


JOS 
e olf Shee eo ae ‘Hudson. 
van ntain: at’ Rouen? Ci Delort; 
S DW. Cutting r 
(ee ent Har 


s Dasenien’ iby Wiittam 
U; Peltx Isman 


ny” Pendens ‘Willem 
Wostate sg de 'Ma- 


Q. Saixes for $5,400. — 


A TE EE pe ALTER Tt 


PIR Raa: PT Lio) cat on . . 
Paces # Rea ae WG. Reve: 


Thomas iE, Kirby Béeing Big 


“Auction ‘at. Mendels- 
4. sohn Hall, 


ak ; 
Ay gee _ it 


rhoroas i. Kirby hee an last evening at 
Medlessohn Hall his wate by auction of. the 
collections: of paintings formed by six art’ 
overs of varied interests. Sixty-e ight hum. j 
bers of the catalogue brought $35,155, as{ 


agin e ) 
patie Ss Head,’’ Seifert; W. Bad ake 
Se imenda? Tait: “BL Bi aay! Ge om ad 
_ 3" "the Parson,” Roseland; I. Loser | & 
Sa ere Nie a Ue Vibe RONG Se cha es gis elt 
4—‘Kranette, fies te bYaR se Reet ade ace 
5—* eg Blaas; I. T. Pay ee 
6— "Oi “Duty,” ‘beane Becca: A abal er: 


NMGRS OTM chy in cin cP eat epee Cleve une die 

oo “Tn Mischies, hs Lembert :) H. Gk Rosen- 
Ng ROREUUPNA estos ha Whigs slag ants gleleoe's 

% 3 Oe “Pasture, Aas Verboeckhoven: A 

HOURS sept la teas ASG ks Tha ON PIAS Ee Is ow scam ae 

o—“Landsea pe,’ Sanchez-Periier: Bei AS 

10-10 "Fool “Like ‘Old | Fool,’ a "Massa; 

Is, Mitchell. 

“Gansta tiopie ne Pasini: 3B. Wolf: 


(12-—“Maternal nxiety,’? Tait: Mrs. K. 
Ls ume oti. Baliecows if 
Rosenbaum ....... GSR Gye las vw Sarehea 
14—*"Moonlight,”’ Delpy ; Ss Pee esurd, eS 
15—“‘Review,’’ Perbosre: iG) Carlton. . 


akg Sa ae Montmartre.” Vs tlchel: Max 
17—*“Bords Se Sia hae one, *"Monchablon; -——— ae 
1S8-—‘*Pets,”’ Meyer ane, Bremen; J. ©. Carl- 
; ‘ton’ SST arate aot a senigke: SOR Ue TS follee T) ee) os tae 
a eea Good ‘Time,’ a Liances; - H, Wig: 


20-—"Who’ ‘Are’ penthay Beards’ x " Stras- 


ree re ee 


2 Sk ‘Tre are ibaa Cre aan 
Ss port," mute Worms; GoUB, 
OP eM ay ip 
21 “On ihe Boulevards,” ‘Beraid es Bs Bh 
RBS OLEN er ooe ais. eis Tate Nc aaa pI Sis cu clighedhe eas 


gps ‘Mariyr. in “Catacombs.” ‘Max: Charles 
AS OenMeren fie Suh sas atta ore vainh y 
(26——"Bosphors,’. Zie UG | PSPPUTRNBOT 3's Wigetase: s 


4(—- Mountain Pool,’’ Suuth: Mitcheth., 

prema bie altssty. ‘the: Wavside,? Ber “16-Belle- 
our; “Wiliam. Haig), Seaton cee ute 

“20 News of AON Henry; Loeser 


WrCony 3 
30-—‘Stirrup Gup, > “pmile; hae ‘Gluckmann 
b—"'Ghat by? e. Wayside,” Strutzei; M. 


Roddici AERA CRESTS NSP PSR winate te 
'32-—'‘Seout,”” Schrev eT} A) Wolf. aren eae § 
Xo?! vein tena f Became, pie A. 


SCNICPOR ier eel vie 
34—Old Ruins,’ Cazin ; H. Johnson. ay ont 
Bd5—“' Sultan's fad. » Pasini: CG. J, Hudson 
Ue Vite, Oise, Delpx ; ¥. HOW: ggin. 
37—'Grand’ Canal,’’ Moran; Max: Ki. Bern- 
PVC ET cea GN Yan oio a pial a aahedone Ayes 
38——‘‘Lord Devon,” Romney ; - Brauk SAW vata ones y 
‘B9-—* a Thomas Drake,” Lawrence; 
MO TIBCE SU aan NYT Sl sh Ad mac en tite Cen OR wie 
40—"Through the Rye,” Langee; F. sae aah 
#1—-"Springt: me,” Fde: Charles’ Cranich, 
422" Misty’ Atoraing.” Japy; G. B. Herd. 
Say “Franklin and Bradlock,’” Jamies; roy 


MAG emery Searle apes ata Luk wale o ciibe eat ANS , 

44—“Cabaret, "> Andreotti; Mitchell... 0.0% 

) ane Barnyard, 3 cen od Collaert mikes 
art atey TARTAN VU: PET RHO OER AREW I ETL 


Ce ee 


a7 Re Front,” Clays; Tooth & Sons 

48— "Invasion by Gauls,’ Luminais; Prank 

2 ‘Moonlight, a aersen: J. M. Dudley 
ee cene nt and Horses, »” Schreyer; Tooth 
ae ODES Siti: Bh od Beene Blea ADs eke aude ola Celie 


170 


ee eb SSRI Le een a 


| I 

6s Diriding ‘Some 
| The highest. pric 
eee deal 


or Is $110, 000. 


an ~ sae last eile 101—“Cup of Tea,’’- Becker ¢) Mrs. R. Ram- 


uétiéa at Mendelssohn Hall of 102-—""Weading sear Heine. 

ons of p ntings es pills vit , 03—"Sheep,’ * Ja A. Gee i 
7-0 eata- |104-—“‘Dreamer,’’ Henher; Gross......,-... 

pS Sixty-nine numbers 0 ae 10g ianetoan Pricghers,”’ Vernet: P. 

might $74,950... This sum, added to. DUET gs est pee as ees 
nf 06-—"Rapid, 6.77, lackner. 
Thursday evening’s sale, makes; 100--‘Hapd Pabst,” Henry: C. Kisekner 
the. total” amount | of the cata-. Phi aaa ode ok ‘ oe “ot ith Se cnien Jule 
asha’s 0. SINE wenn eon 

gna biel ‘fast. oe 8 sale. loa 110—‘‘Landscape,’” Monchablon; J. B. Cobb, 
111—“‘Grand Canal,’”’ Moran 44 G. J. Hudson; 

| $112—""Grand Canyon,” Moran............. 

a Teaver. .. Price. eis bee Audenarde,” @haulows G. A. 
"i nat ® Loeser.:..-.» ay iig— he sy Madrazo dang Wateon. 
cic i Secure ele V1 “Venice, GON oh SBeiOODb Ui Uace 
PFiemeng; 1 Se ae ; 150 116—*¢ oe Beys “h Freedman. ii 


ee fe SEI ASE wees eens 310 Pa ae il ai torm,’ Michel ; Mrs, Ra 


net 2 Wibert “R! Loeser, 315. 


Ce ee Ce ee ee ee ce ny 


Williams, - 1,325 119—‘"The iD petreat. Be Schrey er; ©. 1. Hudson 5.600 
assess. | 900}120—‘‘Gate and Fountain, of ' Delort; J. Dew. ihe 
W. H. Smith 970. SC GAtore ee hae Pie org lala bie aie rau ay 550, 
BS iste aia foiay$! BIB, 121—-"‘Siammer, ti Harpig MICS, aie luid atasantaran nite 3,500) 
ellecour..esee es 825 | 122—‘ ‘Morning Ride,’’ -Kowalski; 8. G, : 
2 asini; A, Tooth Bayno Ring shlial it YSU wig ADE RUG 550 
raking tin oid pba cies 926 123—“‘Reconnaissance,”* Se hs hia, H. Oo, 
1,025 Seixas “ oihisiel Seigler een ee Ree 
375 124—“ Artist's Dream,’? Bernard. 222227772. 200, 
Sn ew erat . 150 }12h—‘‘Near Amsterdam, ”< Clays; Grossv.... 2,000) 
4 126-— “Bay on Naples,’ < Kray; Mrs, _R, i 
ees eeee 650 Ce ee ee ee ar ee ae es 350 
reotti: “Lanthier. 2 110 197—-"‘Valley ‘OF Durdént,”’ Dupre; Gross. : THO: 
Jorms 400 | 128-—‘Gardener’s Daughter,” Bownereau: : b 
Sree 215 |. elix a ea wea ee 3,200: 

360. 129-—“‘Watching and Waiting,’’ Israels. 5,40 
Bivieleit <9 2,000 | 130—‘‘Teton Range,’ Moran... Be die eae oie 
i 131—‘‘Village Kirmess,’’ Teniers, Jr....... 1,400) 
BS es ee 3001182-—-‘"Love Song,’’ Domingo. .......7...5.) 1,500 
: 133. Sheepeote Interior,” ‘Verboeckhoven. oe) Fy OOG: 
teense te stent ees ee 500 | 134—‘Psyche and Butterfly,’ TORIC hidtaeg iaty 200 
: Mayer. psieie's 733 | 185——", Winter-Scheveningen,”* Mesdag ; ae 550. 
Vibert; Lanthier, 450. Neel ede pike Prayer,’’ Madrazo; G. ‘ Ade 

se geces eee PY SL OR Gata: 6 inh ose sp lg Me Hea wk ‘ 

honue Wibert.. AS pe 00 5 137—“Burning Rick,’’ Breton; Felix Isman 1 1, 600 
re i sals.’ BN OWINYSS cael tin as ois Ke OOO ‘Total $74, 4,950) 
ECan, ” Debby. ni eae Dudiey. 10} Sebréyer’s “Retreat” br fa the highest, 
The Glade ” MOU 5:6 «++ 2,600|price and was not the most valuable work, 


—“New Coat,” Grison: ‘S. P.Avery..52 “300 iof the sale. 


“Art Sale at. Kirby’ S Rooms 


h pili i 
117—“‘Neighborly. Nines Tavaelss iif erwin Ny 


pit ve 
the first night's sale ; 
lection: of modern | 
“Schemm, Moses 
Solomon Mehr 


of Henry 
The ri na Bccucen se Thomas BL ‘Kirby and 
pak iced + for sixty-eight paintings. The s2 


Ae be ended to-night. ~ | 

The highest price was $3,000, paid by H. ‘Jannnon 
“tor “Old Ruins,” by Cazin. W. Wolf bought ‘‘The 
Scout,” by Schreyer, for $2,450, and C. I. Hudson, 
Lawvestern Kansas in, 1860,” by eleret ae for ae 

Other sales of special interest were: upes pe tee 
‘of Duty, B. Berne-Bellecour; J. Watson. ....2- "$850 


at are, Bugéne Joseph, Vero envied R, 


ndscape, H. Sanchez-Pe rier} R.A ‘A. Rainay. er 
Market Place, Constan: 2, ‘Aiverto ‘Pasini; B. 
We Se eteeneee reve sey © Nei nh sis Coie ahs uy ease 950° 


Meditation, H. Berne-Bellecour; H. €. Rosenbaum.. 525. 
¥rom Montmartre, Geoctges ose es BH. Bern— 


elmer... . By SN _ 8000 
“Bords de ja Sadne, ‘Lirencourt, “Yan Morichabion; > 
monoedier Coy ii, cae SPV eiy ink Wale style Meese einer e Y 
The Pets, Meyer von Bremen; J. fol Carlton......... 820 
Good Time, José Lilances; A. #. Wiggin....-.0--4 


Hesigarrtenst a Cab, Jules Worms; ray deombs, Gab io Sits 500. 
abrie : 


“News of the. Nomination: E In on, i AL; 


Wiliam: Ftatiee. Cos Sou Me eat Wo ek wc OER se. 
C 4 Attra Cup, Professor William Emilles Loeser B76: 
| The cua ‘by’ the ° Wayside, Gtto “Strtitzel, ¢ or | Gluck= ae 
Her tane “Pelier in the ‘Caimp, “Alexandre. Gabriel Be- Sa 


camps; C. A. Schieren........ B25) 
The Sultan's Escort, Alberta, Pasini; GC. I. Hudson. 1,100 
Entrance to the Grand Canal, ek Moran, vee 
N. Aj; M, B. Bernheimer.....-.....--.-4 iat, 
Portrait of Lord Devon, George Romney; Frank’... 625° 
‘Portrait of Captain Thomas Beaks. Sir Thomas : 
Lawrence, R. A.; ‘Frank’ 500 - 
“Franklin and General Braddock, “Frederick James; Sal, 
en Klotkner......; ce eevee eee orne Us dials eb a bide vis Jaleo i OC 
"Mealtime, Hendrik Valkenburg; H. C. Rosenbaum. 800 
Reale River Front, Antwerp, Payl Jean Clays; Toom +e 
Beaieu wit itiuy . Pacer er ereew SW a eee ~6o he ¥ Hy 
Moonlight, Leonard Gchtman, N, Al: J. M. Dudley. . 450 
'Wallachian Peasant and Horses, Adolf Schreyer; 
’ Toom & Sons 
“Morning on the Lagoon, Veniée, Félix Ziery Fishel, 
i Adler & Betas 5k ae ciass ork Uh mee eee ee ore 600 


Overdue, James G. Tyler; PRLS cca ais viniere a 890 
naar and Fo Fowl, Bugéne Vyontpn ‘Verboeckhoven; va 
Ftnent the Hescert, “Mihély ‘de Munkéesy;, iT " Heine- ious 
Neteeae 0 8%: dle wie} 0,4 vat «gee dp 
On the Housetops, - “Alster, "Benjamin Constant; B. 


Marston . 825 
Gulliver. and ‘the “‘Lilliputians, ‘Jehan ‘Georges “Wiberts a 
He A RROS AUS sae wha: giclate 4g acelh « eimehemtpalere wiaareae SARIS LA GTN B wei 
‘The Bridal Pair, Tito Contt; ‘[. Heineman......... Bt 
| Old City on the Rhine, Wilhelm ehh t——..-. $60 


A Holland Home Interior, J, Horenbant; NGariton’’. 800 | 
Polish patiers Capturing 2 Letina Pe titackor Josef en 
Brandt Relsing OT bs wi asetdhole/elwie 8 a) are el ete sieonete eseeee 1, et 

‘Rividing hy Spoils, tpn: eet P. Henry Dugro.. 


x to. bara Hall. 


ve Solomon Mehrbach, 


ut as @ res 


Or sgl T oa Wet 


Che ast was bid i 
A by A. T Sons. 
ught one ot the 


were we 
te whic 


wrence, which brought 


ddle, Philadelphia. 


s of $100 and over. 

fead, A. Seifert; to Van Orden.. 
_Head, Eugene de Blaas......... 
ead, Eugene hy i geullh to ees 


Pete eee ete seers es eeenrsereeereereree 


eee eer enee 


Ce ee ee 


' Hugene Joseph " Verboeck- 
POG far ALCO es ese o's alec 
H. Sanchez-Perrier; to R. 
Place, Gonstantinopie, ‘Alberto 
iS B, Pe Mintiaterr ik 4 Ks wield ea 
f nxiety, Arthur F, “Wait, N. A.; 
REM RRAENSCW. | LUE’, se ees 
“pide shoe cre ee to FE. 


REEDS 3.6 5S 4 4 0 


Ce ee ae ey 


Hur J avi 66.006 @ O46 8 > 
Bae Berga ae 
ME a ad oy ake o.oo 05 ode 
pes Montmartre aeotaee Aicichs “ie 
‘Bo Max BH. Bernheimer.................... 
la Saone, Lirencourt, Jan Mon- 
lon; to Knoedier & Co............ 
oes worer von Bremen; to J. C. 
Ra ee 
> Are You?” William H. Beard, 
Meeer@eMeStrasbureer......0..00s 
a, A. Bertzik; to J. G. Watson, agent. 
he Packet, Treport, Alfred Stevens; to 
Ce oe clue cceuces 
‘ing the Cab, “Jules” Worms; to A. 


ee eo a) 


Perboyr e} 


Cee ee er ee ey 


“Time, Jose | Llances; 
ens eee eee 


yo VOT. . <<. Rie Righe Wisiss 4 Van's -w Od 3a 
the Boulevards, Jean Beraud: to G. 
eS TET SSI a ann cn 


Christian Martyr in the Catacombs, 
abriel Max; to Charles A. Schieren. 

the Bosphorus, Felix Ziem; to 
Epunger EE en) Las a yaa civ ves 
e Mountain Pool, 


ee ee 


E, See ae. 


Meurer ta Willem Fialg, .......ccse cere 

Yews of the Nomination, E. L. "Henry, 
Pempeesweser da COs sss 0c os)s sos 

Che tirrup up,’ Prof. William Emile; 


SOUR T | CPAICISINATIYI «0.6 05'o 5 20s ces sees 
She Chat by the Wayside, “Otto Strutzel; 
MP RCCR i cle vie peck e tp einen 
The Scout, Adolf Schreyer; to A. Wolt.. 
une-Teller in the Camp, Alexandre 


ick and uneventful sale, bringin 


, and the estate of the late Henry 
The sale is said to be the result 
_ Owners’ desire to reduce over-) 
i galleries and on he to weed out 

ult a. change of is 


exce ent Bellecour b ought the first | 
: price of the sale, géing to William — 
- ™“ Halt by the 


= Schreyer, °°" The 
rouse $2, 450 and the second, 
hian Peasant 4nd Horses,’’ $2, 109. 


iby A. Woit. And the. - 
A picture by e; 
best) 
ansas in 1860” going) 
A le of pictures which; 
ple fire ht the best bargains of b iS 
aia of Lord Devon ~ 
went for $575, and the! 

t Capt. Thomas Drake by Sir 


the only two pictures in the) 
_coming trom the collection of a . 


. Owners ‘at Men- > 
' the auspices of the 
As ociation last evening. 

sixty-eight of them, were) 
of a lot belonging to Peter 
Moses Tanenbaum, William 


$500. | 


ng are pictures, artists, buyers, | CS: 


me © 
a st 
oO 
NErTe 


sy 


i 
bo 
or ct 


— 


Battence to the Grand Canal, fe 
Moran, N. A.; to Max E. Bernheimer. . 725) 


ei Sultan’s Escort, Alberto Pesini; to 
‘| Portral of Lord. Devon, 


|Misty Morning ‘on the Oise, L. Japy; to 
G. B. 


} 
/ 
a 


Old Ruins, Jean Sharles Cazin;: to “Hs 
Johnson, agent ...... 


ee ee ee 


Cc. I.. Hudson.. 


ee eens 


Banks of the Oise, HLS. Delpy; to I, H. Ress 


MVR OF 40:0! och aks o> 


George Rom- 


BOC PbO FORAYS hc leh ee e's s'cjcu aMeiee te 575 | 
Portrait of Capt. Thomas Drake, Sir ag 
Thomas Lawrence. R. A.; to ‘‘ Franky’. 500/ 


| Coming Through the Rye, Georges Lau- Jaen 
ee 1 Buea Sere os Up Pi ets 5 dae 205° — 
By Springtime on the River Dampierre, lred- bl 


gee; to F. W. 


eric Ede; to Charles Cranich...,..... 210%° 


2-DAY PICTURE SALE ; 
BRINGS IN $106,973 


C. 1, Hudson Pays $9,600 for 
Schreyer’s. The Retreat.” 
My 


SOME BUYERS MADE ERRORS 


‘And Several Pictures Were Resold, in 
| Consequence, for Smaller Prices 
—Second Day Total, $74,950. 


sale of the pictures of 
iMessrs. Schlemm, Tanenbaum, Salomon,' 
\Mehrbach, Biddle, and the estate of Hen-} 
iry Steers at Mendelssohn Hall last even-' 
ling brought $74,950, or double tie total of 
'Thursday evening’s sale. Thé> “best pict- 
jures of the collection were sold’ last even-) 
ing, and there was a highet average of 
| orioes, as well as. higher’ prices for. the 
work of the individual aftists. 

| A Schreyer brought tHe highest price 
(of the entire sale, roitte to C. I. Hudson | 
i for 5.600. This was ‘The  Retreat,’”) 


The closing 


Thomas Be: 


MRPAT AY ete ees a Post ke 2. 8 tig wer ate’ aude Kovsere 150° 
Franklin and Gen. Braddock, Krederick ; 
Bi James? to Cy. KIdeter i os eco sites eu ee 450 
Mealtime, Hendrik Valkenburg; to H.C. ig 
FROBGM DAU ee sat elays ciate 3p ceib y nw © cealene rs 300 
-\The River’ Front, Antwerp, Paul Jean ' af 
Clays; to Tooth '& Sons.) . sss sa«eys = 1,5004 >. 
=|The Invasion of Italy by the Gauls, Bich 
Evariste Vitall Luminais; to “! Frank ’’. 200 |. : 
;Moonlight, Leonard Ochtman, N. A.; to a 
SiON! Dr eye Sig gna ol e loins aparo sg ere wes eae 450 
\Wallachian Peasant and Horses, Adolf 
Schreyer; to Tooth & Sons.........+5. 2,100 i 
4On the Marne at Creteil, Luigi Loir; to Be} Se 
Beh NFS A DOTE. 2 Roepe ie suse sp la tae 8 Clete ae, sii 260 
Morning on the Lagoon, Venice, Welix ei 
Ziem; to Fischel, Adler & Schwartz. G00 Be 
The Sentinels, Rudolf Ernst; to 8S. Duffie. 250')- 

J Overdue, James G. Tyler; to F. Reis. 390 % 
{Sheep and Fowl, Eugene. Joseph Ver- Re, 
poeckhoven; to FG: Watson, agent.. 700 — 

— (Western Kansas in 1860, Albert Bier- : 
~*\) stadt, N. A.; to C. I. Hudson........ 1,890 G2 >= 
—-\Ghristmas Eve, Nicholas Mathes;-to F, 5 
PNA IM SEMI os oo os eee ene ce So dire sn wa arp 185 
“| After the Dessert, Mihaly de Munkacsy; } 
to Theodore Heinerman..........64.-+. 1,225 7 
On. the MHousetops, Algiers, Benjamin koe 
Constant: to Edgar S. Marston....... 825 | 
Gulliver and. the Lilliputians, Jehan on 
x Georges Vibert; to Mr. Gross...... ial 
“ine Bridal Pair, Tito Conti; to Mr. Het- 
Be TIER EA (ee bob aloe as Bin ofh 2 a Rite deed 5 Lely mae 
A Humble Home, Bernard de Hoog; to 
_ pr. William COW On | Lae Sea tel Cuaak 205 
Old City on the Rhine, Wilhelm Meyer- Fk 
heim; to FB. W. M. Kann.........-++.5; 460 
“| Preparing the Meal, Bernard de Hoog; ‘: 
bat gis © Ag LATCH ON sc iete cee ois 854 eta sare soya 260 [ 
The Jungfrau, Prof. Otto von Kameke; ; 
Sl NO. TAs Las TE ODUEZ, o's a aieiese alee oie ot noe © 200} 
'A Wolland Home Interior, J. Horen- 
bant; to Mr. Carlton........-+-++++5-> 300 | 
4+ Polish Soldiers Capturing a Turk, Prof. ey. 
| qoser Brandt; to Hugo Reisinger Beit +s 


ate PSs 


- eS EE oS asteheneemeatninedl Lf 


et Pn Lay 


‘fonern: “PAINTINGS ON “SALE. 


————— 
bxt-etgnt Works Gathered by Five: Cor 
oS Jectors Bring $35,185. 7_ ’ 


a7 } 


lie ate of modern péintings: aan 
> Mesars: ‘PA,’ Schemm, M. ‘Tanenbaum, | 
Ve Salonion, S. Mehrbach, I. A. Biddle 
‘nd the late Henry Steers drew a large: 
ludience to’ Mendelssohn Hall last night. | 
‘he bidding was brisk. With*Thomas EK. 
lirby of the American ;Art Association | 
‘$ auctioneer, sixty-eight paintings were | 
dld-for a total of $35,155. vd | 
| The'highest: price paid was. $3 000, given | 
“ie Eke prohinon, agent, for “Old Ruins,” | 
Ns in more pictures will be sold at 
* game. place to-night. Those that 


irought $500 or more are as follows: 
JAt Pasture,” Eugene J oseph Verboeckhoven; 


4 
| 


Pt eT ear ne CaCeHer cre roe $580 
Pee oi E. Sanchez Periier: RA. Ranay 5 
arket ted Constantinople,” Alberto 
PITA WVOLE DE Sse cte ce era ae Oe 950 
Meditation,” E . Berne-Bellecour; H.C. Rosen- 
OE SY 8 ae LN CSG at a 525 
Bords ‘dela Sadne, Lirencourt, ” Jan Mon- 
. chablon; Knoedler & Co.. 500 


The Pets,” Meyer von Bremen: Si “©. Carlton. 320 
Engaging the Cab,” Jules Worms: G. B. 


On vias Bospborus,” Félix Ziem; A. Springer. — 610 
‘Halt by the Wayside,” E. Berne- Balecout 

A MUMREUTER CIEL ALE oie Naz d a cis oO eee a aa eel oreo 1,275 
'The Scout,”. Adolf Schreyer; A- Wolf... no 2,450 
yea suite Jean Charles. Cazin; Hy J ohnson, / 

DA ETip ern E os ce Giese ob sau oie’ s line, Se soa ee ~ $3,060. | 
fhe Sultan's Escort, Alberto Pasini; C. PT: 

SE SIG REPS ns Os Sati lta 0 ree RC 1,100 
§ntrance to the. Grand Canal,. Thomas Moran, 

ON. A.MaxcE.Bernheimer..... Ae ay ae 725 
?ortralt, of Lord Devon, George Romney; Mr... 

Eo deli i Tia. eset PARES SORES =) is eg ea DS eR OE 575 | 
2ortrait of Capt. Thomas Drake, Sir Thomas | 
wuawrence, Rs Ay Mr Prank. os cep edie 3 500 | 
che River Front, Antwerp; Jéan Paul Clays: | 

PEO ae SOUS Sh Se oA seek Pave Ob 4,500 } 
Wallachian Peasant and Horses, Adobe) 400) 

Bchreyer; Tooth & Sons¢.. vi 0..0.0 650602... 2100 
forning on the Lagoon, Venice; Felix Ziem _ 

muisnel, Adler -& (Schwartz: \ ois cesiinvs ares. 600 
Western Kansas in 1860, Albert Bierstadt, 

Pye art: Coe USN a. Ley ee ees ty 1,390 
After the Dessért, Mihaly de Munkacsy; 
’ Theodore Heinemann.: 1,225 
yulliver and the: Liliputians, Wl ehan. Georg es 

MiIDCRE CE. Picross sc. eames Gara 1,025 
Iolish Soldiers Capturing a Turk, Josef Brandt 

PEO MMO ISITIE OL ce tek a Gis ewe Ca am 1,025 
dividing the Spoils, ane Brit ninsP.H. Dugro. 530 


id SS 


Association last night concluded at} 
'sohn Hall before a large and app 
. "audience the sale of 137 modern p 
the property of P. A. Schemm, M len~_ 
baum, W. Salomon, 8. Mehrbach, 1 1 AL 
- Biddle and the late Henry Steers. ageers, 

The total for the evening’s sale a $74,950. 
This,with the total of $35,155 from Thursday 
night’s sale, makes a grand total of $110,105, 
less, however, about $1,200 loss on five paint- | 
ings which, owing to misunderstandings, bite 
to be sold a second time last night. — | 

As on Friday night a Schreyer 
the top price. This was $5,600, fo 
Retreat,” paid by ©. I. Hudson. — sD 
the highest figure of the sale. ae hone. 
Israels brought $4,700 and $5 400 fron private 
buyers. Another Schreyer, ea 
naisance,” went to H.O. Sclean! 

“The Scout,” by Schreyer, which oe 

by an agent for $2,450 on Fri 

brought only $1,750 from H. 
resale. 

Andrew Freedman was amo 
taking a-view of sheep near Fo 
-by Jaeque, for $2,500, and “ 
by J. R. Bayschlag, for $190. 
which brought $500 or over last 


“The Weeping Magdalen,” Jean Jacaues - Pa 
Henner; Mrs. Willlams........ 000 hoes $1,925 | 
‘“Head,” Jean Jacques Henner; G. W.S) y mer. 900 
“Market ern Cons tae ocute: or a iil 
Pasini; W AS Smit a ee ee a or a pee) 9 18 * e : t 970 { 
“Moorish Wrarkae Place, ‘Aiberto” Pastr 
Togsn.-&: Sons..860.. Saeie aies e Pal 


“Cattle,” Maric Dieterle; R. H. Voorhies 


et 


“Landscape,” E. Sanchez- ‘Perrier; J. B. Co 
“The Po, oma ales of Night,” Jean Charles 
Be met Coe HG ” 2,000 
“The Departure for the Hunt,” ules Worm care 
FRG Selx eS. 20) uid Or ee “ake esa? ¢ O00 
“Ths Epes Courtyard,”-Jehan Ge eee 
Vibert: L. A. Lauthier.. Leese (Goa. f 
“The Pardinere Bouquet,” ‘Jehan | FE01 bese o\ 
Vibert; Otto Burnett SPs me deve Oe eee saedenes, ‘3 900 5 
“The Flock,” Charles Emile Jacque. a 675 
ee wo ” Jean Charles aii F M. “1,50 if] 
“the “Ginas,” Jean Baptiste ‘Camille © a na | 
Knoedter & Co. cae ovine ae ee 2,600 | 
“Sheep—Near Fontainebleau,” Charlé om Deas | 
Jacque, Andrew Freedman...) .00.j,..45° 2,000 | 
“The Dreamer,” Jean Jacques Fenner; Gross, 
GeAler ii. . va urw ce eumenens. Cee neem eevee 11850 | 


“Austrian Prisoners Forced to Work,”  Bmile - 
Jean Horace Veet Judge P. H. Du ro. ee 
“The Childhood of Ra id Transit,” By hoe 
Henry; N..A.; C, Clackner. 2.02.01 eels esi 
ane re s Escort,” ATberie Pasini:Knoed- ei 
er & : 
“Landscape,” 


ee a ee ce ee ar ey ee de pd 


Jan Monchablon;: J Be Co! es 1 
“In the Grand Canal,” Thomas Moran, 
An TERPS en & oe oan a aie 

ace Salute, Venice,” Martin Rico: a y ; 

“a Nelahboriy Calig’ Jose? Teracisis Je. 4100 | 

“The Retreat.” Adolf Schreyer; ©. I. . Hudson. — { 

= part, k | 
/ 


CO eae rer aes dler 


“Gate and. Fountain at SO 
James D’W. Cutting 
dag Wad Henri 


SOOT Re are ee meme wn e eee wseresese 


Teese ever ee eeee ae 


Bayne 
“The Reconnaissance,” 
OQ. Selxens Ry sagen 


Li et ee eC ee ee 


ee ee ne ee oe oe eee oe ae er er at rar ir ar 


“The Suntocoes unions butie” ose Se | 
. VerbOeskBov ess iki cee wee teres 1,000 | 
“Winter at Scheveningen,” Hendrik Willem. ea 
Annee Gross, dea ers, 580") . 


ue Raimundo ‘de ‘Ma- ‘ ar | 
“The ‘Buraine “Rick,” Jules gayetanee: Felix 


RS ree Acs Ra 
at a Cor ee 
Bye ee RF ena 
isan Be 


Gioia 


No. 129. The Gardener’s Daughter. 
By Wriuiam ApotpHe BovcuErEau 


gore 
Pie 
ON FREE VIEW 
DAY AND EVENING 


AT THE AMERICAN ART GALLERIES 


MADISON SQUARE SOUTH, NEW YORK 


FROM SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 24ru 
UNTIL THE MORNING OF THE DAY 
OF SALE, INCLUSIVE 


AN IMPORTANT COLLECTION 


OF 


MODERN PAINTINGS 


TO BE SOLD AT UNRESTRICTED PUBLIC SALE BY 
ORDER OF PRIVATE OWNERS 


AT MENDELSSOHN HALL 


FORTIETH STREET, EAST OF BROADWAY 


ON THURSDAY AND FRIDAY EVENINGS 
MARCH Ist anp 2npD 


BEGINNING PROMPTLY AT 8.30 O'CLOCK 


ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUE 


OF AN 


IMPORTANT COLLECTION 


OF 


MODERN PAINTINGS 


BELONGING TO THE FOLLOWING PRIVATE OWNERS 


PETER A. SCHEMM 
MOSES TANENBAUM 
WILLIAM SALOMON 
SOLOMON MEHRBACH 
LOUIS A. BIDDLE 


AND THE ESTATE OF THE LATE 


HENRY STEERS 


TO BE SOLD AT UNRESTRICTED PUBLIC SALE 


AT MENDELSSOHN HALL 


FORTIETH STREET, EAST OF BROADWAY 


ON THE DATES HEREIN STATED 


THE SALE WILL BE CONDUCTED BY 
THOMAS E. KIRBY 
OF THE AMERICAN ART ASSOCIATION, Managers 
NEW YORK: 1906 


Press of J. J. Little & Co. 
Astor Place, New York 


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CONDITIONS OF SALE 


1. The highest Bidder to be the Buyer, and if any dispute arise 
between two or more Bidders, the Lot so in dispute shall be im- 
mediately put up again and re-sold. 

2. The Auctioneer reserves the right to reject any bid which is 
merely a nominal or fractional advance, and therefore, in his 
judgment, likely to affect the Sale injuriously. 


3. The Purchasers to give their names and addresses, and to 
pay down a cash deposit, or the whole of the Purchase-money, if 
required, in default of which the Lot or Lots so purchased to be 
immediately put up again and re-sold. 

4. The Lots to be taken away at the Buyer’s Expense and Risk 
within twenty-four hours from the conclusion of the Sale, and the 
remainder of the Purchase-money to be absolutely paid, or other- 
wise settled for to the satisfaction of the Auctioneer, on or before 
delivery; in default of which the undersigned will not hold them- 
selves responsible if the lots be lost, stolen, damaged, or destroyed, 
but they will be left at the sole risk of the Purchaser. 


5. While the undersigned will not hold themselves responsible 
for the correctness of the description, genuineness, or authen- 
ticity of, or any fault or defect in, any Lot, and make no War- 
ranty whatever, they will, upon receiving previous to date of 
Sale trustworthy expert opinion in writing that any Painting 
or other Work of Art is not what it is represented to be, use 
every effort on their part to furnish proof to the contrary; fail- 
ing in which, the object or objects in question will be sold subject 
to the declaration of the aforesaid expert, he being liable to 
the Owner or Owners thereof, for damage or injury occasioned 
thereby. 

6. To prevent inaccuracy in delivery, and inconvenience in the 
settlement of the Purchases, no Lot can, ow any account, be re- 
moved during the Sale. 

7. Upon failure to comply with the above conditions, the money 
deposited in part payment shall be forfeited; all Lots uncleared 
within one day from conclusion of Sale shall be re-sold by public 
or private sale, without further notice, and the deficiency (if any) 
attending such re-sale shall be made good by the defaulter at 
this Sale, together with all charges attending the same. This Con- 
dition is without prejudice to the right of the Auctioneer to en- 
force the contract made at this Sale, without such re-sale, if he 
thinks fit.. 

8. The undersigned are in no manner connected with the 
business of the cartage or packing and shipping of purchases, and 
although they will afford to purchasers every facility for em- 
ploying careful carriers and packers, they will not hold them- 
selves responsible for the acts and charges of the parties engaged 
for such services. 


THe AMERICAN ART ASSOCIATION, Mawnacenrs. 
THOMAS E. KIRBY, AvcrioneEerr. 


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FIRST EVENING’S SALE 
THURSDAY, MARCH Isr, 1906 
AT MENDELSSOHN HALL 


BEGINNING PROMPTLY AT 8.30 oO’cLOCK 


No. 1 
A. SEIFERT NOR ees 
GERMAN Vinge 
Contemporary UW. Vane 


GIRL’S HEAD 


Tuis is a study of a young girl’s head and shoulders, 
with the face in three-quarters view to the right. She 
wears a medieval head-dress, with bullion and jewelled 
bands and ornaments, which completely hides her hair 
and falls over her forehead. A brown velvet cloak or 
jacket covers her shoulders and a pink-lined collar rises 
high on either side of her neck. 


Signed at the right, A. SEIFERT. 
Height, 7 inches; width, 5 inches. 


Owner, WILLIAM SALOMON. 


No. 2 


GU 


ARTHUR F. TAIT, N.A. 
AMERICAN 


SEE C Gucteg 1819— 


FRIENDS 


Four ducks and a drake, the former sitting down and 
the latter standing up as if watching over his flock, are 
gathered on a small sandy beach near the edge of a shal- 
low pool. Behind the little group, which is in strong sun- 
light, is a view of a wild woodland. 


Signed at the lower right, A. F. Tarr, N.A., N. Y. 
Height, 8 inches; length, 12 inches. 


Owner, M. TANENBAUM. 


No. 3 


bo — 
HARRY ROSELAND 


AMERICAN My eco he 


1866— 


THE PARSON 


A stupious colored parson of advanced years is seated 
at his study table, earnestly engaged in reading a calf- 
bound volume, which is propped against two other large- 
sized tomes. Scattered on the table on either side are 
papers, writing utensils and books, with a crumpled 
bandanna handkerchief, and a petroleum lamp of the 
ordinary pattern stands on the table ready to be lighted. 


Signed at the lower right, Harry RoseLanp. 
Height, 10 inches; length, 134, inches. 


Owner, M. TANENBAUM. 


No. 4 


[PAO — 
EUGENE DE BLAAS 


Vas ft. : | GERMAN 
1843— 
. BRUNETTE HEAD 


Tuts is a study of a dark-skinned, dark-haired young 
maiden, about two-thirds life size, the face seen in three- 
quarters view to the right, the head relieved against a 
graded tone of red. She wears a low-cut chemise with a 
shot green shawl over her shoulders. A brilliant pendant 
hangs from her ear, and around her neck is a series of 


small chains. 


Signed at the lower left, Evuctne pe Buaas. 
Height, 1314 inches; width, 10%, inches. 


Owner, M. TANENBAUM. 


No. 5 VL 


EUGENE DE BLAAS i Zs oe 


GERMAN 
1843— 


BLOND HEAD 


Tus is a study, about two-thirds life-size, of the head 
and shoulders of a fair-haired young girl, the face 
almost in profile to the left, and the back turned slightly 
toward the spectator. She wears a plain gold earring 
and a small chain of the same metal, and is dressed in 
a lace-trimmed figured silk gown. The background is a 
graded tone of cool gray. 


Signed at the left, EucknE vE Buaas. 
Height, 131% inches; width, 1014 inches. 


Owner, M. TANENBAUM. 


No. 6 
gf O— 


E. BERNE-BELLECOUR 
FRENCH 


We G, Valbaeks 1838— 


OFF DUTY 


THREE dismounted cavalrymen are lounging on the side 
of a country road which leads to a country town in the 
distance, where a detachment of soldiers is seen drawn 
up, apparently at drill. In the foreground one of the 
cavalrymen stands erect watching his two companions, 
who are chatting together a little distance farther off, 
and beyond them is a sentinel, standing near a telegraph 
post. 


Signed at the lower left, E. Berne-Betiecour, 1897. 
Height, 12%, inches; length, 1734 inches. 


Owner, Sortomon MEHRBACH. 


No. 7 SESE jf —— 


LOUIS EUGENE LAMBERT 


FRENCH ao: Wrace 


1825— 


IN MISCHIEF 


Turee tiny kittens having found a feather duster are 
having a game with it, and are grouped around it in 
various attitudes characteristic of their kind. The feath- 
ers are fastened in a red velvet socket with a bone handle, 
and in the foreground is a bit of blue drapery. 


Signed at the lower right, L. Eve. LAMBERT. 
Height, 91, inches; length, 13 inches. 


Owner, Peter A. SCHEMM. 


S£o “Noy 3 
EUGENE JOSEPH VERBOECKHOVEN 
BELGIAN 


Ur IE freca 1799—1881 


AT PASTURE 


In the foreground stand a spotted cow and two sheep, 
the former just emerging from a shallow pool, where she 
has been quenching her thirst. Beyond her rise pollarded 
trees with straggling branches and sparse foliage, re- 
heved against a sky filled with high drifting cumuli. 


Signed at the lower right, EuGENE VERBOECKHOVEN FT. 1877, 
and a certificate of authenticity on the back. 


Height, 13 inches; width, 1114 inches. 


Owner, M. TANENBAUM. Ry / Loy 
ob Cae Lack, Joon © — 


No. 9 SUI pst 
E. SANCHEZ-PERRIER | 


SPANISH WA Va ach 


A DEEP and quiet river extends across the foreground, 


LANDSCAPE 


and beyond it rises a gently sloping bank, covered near 
the water’s edge by a luxurious growth of coarse bushes 
and willow and birch trees. A boat with a single figure is 
floating near the bank, and on the slope above, the roofs 
and walls of whitewashed cottages gleam in the sunlight. 
A few soft clouds float in the sky. 


Signed at the lower right, EK. SancuEz-PeErriEerR, GESILLINA. 
Height, 9 inches; length, 16 inches. 


Owner, M. TANENBAUM. 


+ Lee 
‘P. MASSANI 
z ITALIAN 
WH fUleheEe 
Contemporary 


NO FOOL LIKE AN OLD FOOL 


Aw old Italian peasant woman is engaged in peeling 
potatoes at her kitchen table, when a greengrocer’s 
helper, who is about to deliver a basket of vegetables, 
leans over the table and affectionately pinches the old 
woman’s cheek, to her evident satisfaction. 


Signed at the upper right, P. Massant, Firenze. 
Height, 11%, inches; length, 15°4 inches. 


Owner, M. TANENBAUM. 


No. 11 P/O pane 
ALBERTO PASINI 
ITALIAN” © fb-Woef: 


1826—1899 


MARKET PLACE, CONSTANTINOPLE 


A Lorry archway in a row. of stuccoed facades is evi- 
dently the entrance to a great bazaar. On either side are 
shops filled with various kinds of merchandise, and to 
the left is a large crowd of people assembled near a café. 
Two or three street merchants show their wares, and 
horsemen mingle with the crowd. The scene is in bright 
sunlight, which falls strongly from the upper left. 


Signed at the lower right, A. Pasint. 
Height, 1314 inches; width, 161%, inches. 


Virb 0/F ELF 
A 


Ae 
LIO 


Owner, M. TANENBAUM. 


EOS No. 12 


ARTHUR F. TAIT, NoAs 
AMERICAN 


afd a bbl ran 1819—1905 


MATERNAL ANXIETY 


A mornHer hen with a brood of a dozen newly hatched 
chickens has found a morsel of food, which she holds in 
her beak, clucking meanwhile to assemble her offspring. 
The little birds eagerly run to the mother’s call, actively 
fluttermg their tiny wings. The background is a ledge 
of moss-covered rock, half hidden by rough grass and 


bushes. 


Signed at the lower right, A. F. Tart, N.A., N. Y., 95. 
Height, 131%, inches; length, 211% inches. 


Owner, M. TANENBAUM. 


INO Lets 
S 27 pene 
E. BERNE-BELLECOUR 
FRENCH 


1838— Sr ME. Re2ere tac 


MEDITATION 


STaNpIne near a half-ruined wall an officer thought- 
fully contemplates the shattered stones, evidently study- 
ing the effect of shell fire. Beyond the wall, standing in - 
an open pasture, are three companions in red kepis and 
gray cloaks earnestly conversing together. A line of 
low hills forms the horizon, and the sky is nearly covered 
by a thin stratum of clouds, the ight being concentrated 
near the zenith. 


Signed at the lower left, E. Berne-Betiecour, 1896. 
Height, 181%, inches; width, 131% inches. 


Owner, M. TANENBAUM. 


—— No. 14 
J - — 
HIPPOLY TE CAMILLE DELPY 
FRENCH 


a Ker Contemporary 


MOONLIGHT 


A BROAD river extends nearly across the foreground, 
and two large barges are moored to the opposite bank 
near a group of tall trees on a point around which the 
river winds. In the shallow water in the left foreground 
grow lilies and various water plants. A flock of startled 
ducks swims away from the shallows out into the deep 
water of the river. The moon is just appearing from 
beneath a bank of clouds high in the heavens, and here 
and there a rift of light shows between the masses of 


vapor. 


Signed at the lower right, H. C. Depry, 57. 
Height, 14 inches; length, 231, inches. 


Owner, Peter A. SCHEMM. 


No. 15 JFL — 


P. E. L. PERBOYRE 


A 
FRENCH VOTE e, 


Contemporary 


THE REVIEW 


NaPpoLeEon, mounted on his famous white charger, and 
followed by marshals, aides, and a numerous escort, is 
passing in front of his army, raising his chapeau as he 
greets his Old Guard. Beyond the horsemen, and above 
the heads of the soldiers who are drawn up in line, is a 
low hill in the distance. The sky is covered with soft, 
luminous clouds. 


Signed at the lower left, PERBoyRE. 


Height, 141%, inches; length, 18 inches. 


Owner, PETER A. SCHEMM. 


Jjoo— No. 16 


GEORGES MICHEL 


ies AG i fins FRENCH 


1763—1843 


FROM MONTMARTRE 


THis is a view over the plain of Paris from the hill 
of Montmartre. On the left stands the well-known wind- 
mill approached by a flight of stone steps and crowning 
the summit of a steep elevation. A flood of sunlight 
strikes the middle distance and brings into prominence 
a level bit of ground, across which winds a broad road 
leading toward the town, where the church spires and 
towers rise high above the roofs of the buildings, and a 
stone bridge with three arches spans the river. A cloud, 
with slanting veils of falling rain, drifts across the land- 
scape. 


Height, 18 inches; length, 24 inches. 


Owner, PETER A. SCHEMM. 


No. 17 


(8) ——— 
JAN MONCHABLON : We 


FRENCH Wt. 
0 


Contemporary 


BORDS DE LA SAONE, LIRENCOURT 


A NARROW river winds between meadows and low hills 
of a pleasant farming country, fringed here and there 
by willows and other trees, and crossed in the fore- 
ground on the right by a stone dam with gates. In the 
distance a red-roofed village, dominated by the spire of 
a church, crowns an elevation a short distance above 
the river. A few scattered clouds drift in the sky, and 
the sunshine falls full upon the landscape from the right. 


Signed at the lower right, Jan MoncHaBLon. 
Marked at the lower left “229.” 
Height, 21%, inches; width, 1434 inches. 
Owner, M. TANENBAUM. 
792096 Cott A¥KY 
{- uwsxXx 
J oCre MT. 


UP RE oars ; No. 18 


MEYER VON BREMEN 


L Ad an Per GERMAN 


1813—1886 
THE PETS 


A PEASANT girl wearing a white cap, and a red shawl 
over a gray bodice, a green petticoat and wooden shoes, 
stands with a basket on her arm feeding a pet goat 
which, with its kid, stands near her. The little group is 
relieved against a roughly whitewashed cottage, with a 
straggling vine growing over a double window, from the 
lower casement of which a shutter is hanging on one 
hinge. 
Signed at the lower left, Meyer von Bremen, 1875. 


Height, 15 inches; width, 111% inches. 
Owner, Peter A. SCHEMM. 


JOSE LLANCES 


SPANISH AK. W pac 


Contemporary 


A GOOD TIME 


THREE gay young cavaliers are having a roystering 
time in a small cabaret, and have persuaded the land- 
lady and the serving maid to join the party. One of 
the young men plays a guitar, another is sportively at- 
tempting to embrace his comely companion, and the 
third frantically waves a fan over the lady’s head. The 
costumes and all the accessories are of the seventeenth 


century period. 


Signed at the lower right, LANCES, Paris, 795. 
Height, 17%/, inches; length, 21% inches. 


Owner, M. TANENBAUM. 


J 10 Sige | No. 20. 


WILLIAM H. BEARD, N.A. 
AMERICAN 
1825—1900 
“WHO ARE YOU?” 


A raApsit, which has been ranging for food among the 
ferns, suddenly comes across a gray squirrel, and, 
perched on his hind legs, gazes at the newly found ani- 
mal with surprise, not unmixed with anxiety. The squir- 
rel, holding a nut in both paws, returns the rabbit’s 
gaze with interest. 


Signed at the lower left, W. H. Brarp, 1890. 
Height, 18 inches; length, 24 inches. 


Owner, M. TANENBAUM, 


No, 21 re 
ae 


A. BERTZIK 
GERMAN D4 Wi DW 4 
Contemporary x = C ¢ 


HEAD 


Tue head and shoulders of a young lady in sixteenth 
century costume. She wears a hat with an ostrich 
feather, a fur boa around her neck over a richly 
trimmed velvet bodice, and a, green jacket. She has 
large pearls in her ears, and a pearl and ruby necklace, 
with a cross of the same jewels. 


Signed at*the upper left, A. Berrzix. 
Height, 21 inches; width, 17 inches. 


Owner, Soromon MEuHRBACH. 


Bsc 


No. 22 


ALFRED STEVENS 
Ly BELGIAN 
1828— 


THE PACKET, TREPORT 


A sMALL steamboat, from the tall funnel of which a 
narrow cloud of dark smoke drifts far away, is the 
prominent object in the composition. Following the boat 
is a broad wake of white water extending down diago- 
nally to the left foreground. A large mass of storm 
clouds slowly rising toward the zenith discloses the 
lower part of the disk of the sun. 


Signed at the lower left, § vevens. 
Height, 16 inches; width, 12 inches. 


Owner, Peter A, SCHEMM. 


No. 23 Je te 
JULES WORMS 


FRENCH ATE Theq er : 


1837— 


ENGAGING THE CAB 


Tuis is an illustration of a little incident of life in a 
country town in Spain. The driver of a curious one- 
horse chaise, with .brass trimmings and decorated back, 
is chaffering with a young lady who has evidently asked 
him the price of a course. Beyond the group are the 
gables and facades of the town, with the simple belfry 
and turret of a church breaking the sky-line above the 
roofs. 
Signed at the lower right, J. Worms. 
Height, 16 inches; width, 13 inches. 


Owner, M. TANENBAUM. 


No. 24 


LT Ce JEAN BERAUD 
FRENCH 


YMDS. Ynctehele 1849— 


ON THE BOULEVARDS 


Tue motive of this picture is found on an autumn day 
on the boulevard in front of the Café Américain. On 
the right is the broad sidewalk with a few promenaders 
in front of the café, and on the left is a vista along a 
street crowded with carriages. The principal feature in 
the composition is a kiosk covered with brilliant adver- 
tisements which stands on the edge of the sidewalk. 


Signed at the lower left, JEAN BEravup. 


Height, 1414 inches; length, 21 inches. 


Owner, M. TANENBAUM. 


No. 25 J G0 es. 
GABRIEL MAX 


GERMAN ee Hdedeen 


1840— 


A CHRISTIAN MARTYR 
IN THE CATACOMBS 


A CuHrisTIANn maiden, who has been tortured to blindness 
by the fanatical Romans, is seated near the narrow en- 
trance to one of the quarries used as a catacomb, offering 
a tiny lamp to an aged lady in mourning dress who is 
about to pay a visit to the resting place of her departed 


ones. On the stone bench beside the young martyr are a 
number of other lighted lamps, and on the floor, across 


her trailing mantle, are thrown two palm branches, with 
flowers scattered here and there. 


Signed at the lower right, G. Max. 
Height, 221% inches; width, 19 inches. 


Owner, WILLIAM SALOMON. 


(oes No, 26 


FELIX ZIEM 


es : FRENCH 
AM. Vrg 1 1891— 


ON THE BOSPHORUS 


Tue rippling strait, extending partly across the fore- 
ground, sweeps away to the right, where it is lost in the 
glow of sunrise. In the foreground on the right a jagged 
mass of rocks contrasts with the blue water, and on the 
left a large caique with a large number of rowers is 
rapidly moving across the water. Beyond the caique is 
seen the point of Stamboul with the great mosque, tow- 
ering minarets and the irregular mass of buildings. 
The sun is just rising and a broad band of warm light 
is reflected on the surface of the water. 


Signed at the lower left, Ziem. 
Height, 1414 inches; length, 2114 inches. 


Owner, M. TANENBAUM. 


No. 27 | / be— 


HENRY P. SMITH aoe haa 
AMERICAN ) Vutehc EO 
1854— 


THE MOUNTAIN POOL 


A sMALL pool surrounded by bowlders and enclosed by 
steep sloping banks nearly covers the foreground. Be- 
yond and around the bowlders rises a large group of 
beech trees, touched here and there by a gleam of sun- 
light. On the right of the clump is a vista across a 
pleasant farming country to a line of low hills in the 
horizon, and on the left is seen the slope of a pasture, 
with outcropping ledges of rock here and there, and a 
fringe of trees beyond. 


Signed at the lower right, Henry P. Smiru. 
Height, 191/, inches; length, 2714 inches. 


Owner, M. TANENBAUM. 


No. 28 


SF vad ear E. BERNE-BELLECOUR 
We 7 2 FRENCH 
ad fis } t= 
1838— 
he hour Jt1r her ‘ 


HALT BY THE WAYSIDE 


Two cuirassiers have halted for a moment on a coun- 
try road, apparently to give their horses a moment’s 
rest. One of them, who has dismounted, is holding his 
horse by the bridle, while his companion in the saddle 
rolls a cigarette. In front of the horses sits a dog, evi- 
dently watching his master. On the left, in the far dis- 
tance, is a small country town, with the dominating 
form of a large church with a square tower. 


Signed at the lower right, E. Berne-Bexiecour, 1904. 
Height, 16 inches; length, 26 inches. 
Owner, M. TANENBAUM. 
. Onl EF 
lodtdttb- farisa fF 663 Cot fr 


Pcie HONE aR 


No. 29 


1 hae 
eel ELENRY,  N.A. 


AMERICAN vk 6 Wz 


1841— 


NEWS OF THE NOMINATION 


Aw old farmer returning from the village stops his horse 
in the road to give political news to a couple of farmers, 
who, having left their haymaking, are taking a rest on 
the bars by the roadside. On either side of the road are 
characteristic snake fences, and to the right, beyond 
the two farmers, the roof of a cottage rises above the 


surrounding trees. 


Signed at the lower left, E. L. Henry, 96. 
Height, 1744 inches; length, 28 inches. 


Owner, M. TANENBAUM. 


No. 30 


PROFESSOR WILLIAM EMILE 
FRENCH 


Contemporary 


Gs Vg ee 


THE: STIRRUP CUP 


Five hussars, of the time of Napoleon’s wars, have 
halted at a village inn, and one of them dismounted and, 
standing by his horse’s head, holds a glass of wine in 
his hand, while he is exchanging compliments with the 
pert landlady, who stands in the doorway holding her 
small child by the hand. On a bench by the door sits 
the landlord himself smoking a long clay pipe with 
his faithful dog at his feet. 


Signed at the lower right, @ are, MUNCHEN. 
Height, 19 inches; length, 28 inches. 


Owner, PETER A. ScHEMM. 


No. 31 


OTTO STRUTZEL {7° 


GERMAN C42 : 


Contemporary 


fi CHAT BY THE WAYSIDE 


In the foreground is a hill crossed by a narrow country 
road, and here rest a flock of sheep after feeding in the 
pasture. Near them a wayfarer, leaning against the 
tongue of a cart, is chatting with a young child, and 
just over the brow of the hill, to the left, the farmer is 
seen plowing the slope with a yoke of cattle. A rank of 
large trees in spring foliage rises on the crest of the 
hill, and to the left the eye extends across a broad cul- 
tivated valley to a mysterious distance, under a sky filled 
with luminous clouds. 7 


Signed at the lower left, Orro Srriirzer, 1886. 
Height, 20 inches; length, 28 inches. 


Owner, Peter A. ScHEMM. 


No. 32 


[vO — ADOLF SCHREYER 
GERMAN 
A; Woe 1828—1899 
THE SCOUT 


Iy the foreground a Moorish horseman, evidently on the 
alert for the enemy, because he holds in his right hand 
his long musket ready to shoot at a moment’s notice, is 
urging his shaggy little white pony over a rough coun- 
try, Just emerging from a narrow ravine. Beyond the 
horseman, who is in strong effect of light and shade, is 
a gently sloping hillside covered with coarse grass and 
bushes. The sky is partly covered by small clouds, drift- 


ing high in the air. 


Signed at the lower left, Av. ScHREYER. 
Height, 29 inches; width, 22% inches. 


Owner, M. TANENBAUM. 


Sepa pemmmnrmanegery ea erent ome Fer ae a = sete a - poem | 
% ; 2 j 
b ayes : 


No. 33 


ALEXANDRE GABRIEL DECAMPS 32%-— 
FRENCH "ae 


1803—1860 7. AA Hu Hie s 


FORTUNE-TELLER IN THE CAMP 


A croup of dark-skinned Arabs, in a variety of colored 
costumes, are assembled near their camp in the desert, 
and listen to the prophecies of a young fortune-teller, 
who, clad in a simple garment, stands in front of the 
group. The rounded forms of tents, two palm trees with 
sparse foliage, and a huge bowlder are seen behind the 
group, and on either side the eye wanders over the broad, 
rugged expanse of the desert. The foreground is mostly 
in shadow and the rest of the landscape is strongly 
illuminated by the sunshine. 


Signed at the lower right, Decamps. 
Height, 18 inches; length, 27 inches. 


Owner, Peter A. SCHEMM. 


rae 
MW 


No. 34 


JEAN CHARLES CAZIN 
FRENCH 


, 1840—1901 
OP 


OLD RUINS 


Part of a ruined stone building stands on the summit 
of a hill in the left foreground, which is covered with a 
rank growth of coarse grass. A single figure of a peas- 
ant woman is partly leaning, partly sitting on the low 
foundations of the ruined house, pensively resting her 
head on her left hand. Beyond the ruins is a rolling 
country, with a partly wooded hill on the right and a 
broad, grassy sunlit slope on the left. The horizon line 
is lost in a veil of thin vapor which sweeps across the 
landscape, trailing from a mass of low clouds which 
completely covers the sky, with the exception of a few 
tiny spots of blue which show in the upper left of the 


composition. 


Signed at the lower right, J. C. Cazrn. 
Height, 231% inches; length, 29 inches. 


Owner, Estate of the late Henry Sreers. 


CUMG4 Aefity WKY 


No. 35 


ALBERTO PASINI he 
ITALIAN 


1826—1899' Se, S. Waedaor 


THE SULTAN’S ESCORT 


A party of armed Moorish horsemen are proceeding 


through a narrow defile in a rocky country, guarding 
a covered litter in which are seated veiled women. On 
either side of the narrow path are rough banks covered 
with tropical vegetation, and in the distance is a lofty 
precipice rising high against the sky. 


Signed at the lower right, A. Pasrnt. 


Height, 22 inches; width, 18 inches. 


Owner, Perer A. Scuemm. 


ee No. 36 
H. J. DELPY 


ee: A, Wepyes FRENCH 


Contemporary 


BANKS OF THE OISE 


From a grass-covered point in the left foreground 
the ground slopes to a low elevation in the middle dis- 
tance, where a red-roofed cottage stands overhung by 
poplars and other trees. A broad river extends diago- 
nally to the right and curves around between two hills. 
A peasant woman is washing clothes in the shallow water 
just beyond the spot where a boat is drawn up, and 
crossing the river from the opposite bank is a rowboat 
with two occupants. The sky is filled with jagged clouds, 
suggesting the passing of a storm. 


Signed at the lower right, H. J. Detpy. 
Height, 21 inches; length, 26 inches. 


Owner, Peter A. SCHEMM. 


No. 36. Banks of the Oise. By H. J. Detry. 


THOMAS MORAN, N.A. : 


1837— 


ENTRANCE TO THE GRAND CANAL 


Groups of boats and barges, some with sails, some with- 
out, and all filled with gayly dressed people, float on the 
placid waters of the Canal San Marco, off the Riva. 
Beyond the central group of boats is seen the entrance 
to the Grand Canal with the Ducal Palace on the right, 
and the Salute on the left, half lost in the glowing mist 
of sunset. The sky is nearly covered by masses of vapor, 
and the light is concentrated near the horizon. 


Signed at the lower left, Ht ORAN, 1905. 
Height, 20 inches; length, 30 inches. 


Owner, M. TANENBAUM. 


No. 88 


Se —— 
GEORGE ROMNEY 
~ 
4, SA Quill : ENGLISH 
Snr 1734—1802 


PORTRAIT OF LORD DEVON 
Oval 


Tue head and shoulders of a middle-aged gentleman in 
three-quarters view to the right, the head slightly in- 
clined upon the left shoulder, and the eyes looking 
toward the spectator. He wears a full gray wig, a blue 
coat lined with satin and trimmed with gold galloon over 
a cream-colored satin waistcoat, and a loose white jabot. 
The background is an effect of sky with storm clouds. 
The sitter was Sir William, Viscount Courtenay, of 

- Powderham Castle, County Devon, created peer May 
6, 1762. 


Height, 30 inches; width, 25 inches. 


From the collection of Louis A. Bippte, Esa., Philadelphia. 


No. 39 
Ue 


SIR THOMAS LAWRENCE, R.A. 


ENGLISH Gy, Di Oy PP 


1769—1830 


PORTRAIT OF CAPTAIN THOMAS DRAKE 


Tuis is the life-size portrait of a man in early middle 
life seen to the waist. He wears a military costume with 
a high double-breasted blue coat with two rows of but- 
tons close together, a high collar trimmed with gold 
galloon over red, large epaulettes, a decoration on his 
left breast and a sword belt around his waist. The left 
hand is resting on the belt. The body is in full face and 
the head in three-quarters view to the left, somewhat 
raised, and the eyes turned in the same direction. The 
face is framed by a mass of curly brown hair and whis- 
kers trimmed rather closely to the cheeks. The back- 
ground is a graded tone of warm gray. 

The sitter for this portrait was Capt. Thomas Drake, 
originally Thomas Trayton Fuller, but who assumed by 
sign manual, under the settlement of Sir Francis Henry 
Drake, Bart., the additional surnames and arms of Eliot 
and Drake. He was created a baronet in 1821. Was 
captain in the army and served throughout the greater 
part of the Peninsular War. 


Height, 36 inches; width, 28 inches. 


From the collection of Louis A. Binpie, Esa., Philadelphia. 


No. 40 


aod 
; GEORGES LAUGEE 
es LG FRENCH 


Contemporary 


COMING THROUGH THE RYE 


A youne peasant girl, dressed in black bodice over a 
white chemise, blue apron and lavender petticoat, is 
walking along a path between harvest fields carrying on 
her head a sheaf of gleaned wheat. Behind her a broad 
landscape extends to the distant horizon. The sky is 
covered by a stratum of luminous clouds. 


Signed at the lower right, Grorces LAuG#E. 
Height, 22 inches; width, 15 inches. 


Owner, Peter A. ScHEMM. 


No. 41 el. OC — 
FREDERIC EDE 


GERMAN CH esi eS ee 


_ Contemporary 


SPRINGTIME ON THE RIVER DAMPIERRE 


A RApip stream of moderate width runs down to the 
foreground diagonally from the middle distance, where 
it winds around between two cottages, one on either 
bank. On the left is an overhanging mass of flowering 
bushes, and between the cottages is seen, in the distance, 
a level pasture with cattle feeding. 


Signed twice at the lower right, Frepertc Ene. 
Height, 24 inches; length, 29 inches. 


Owner, Peter A. SCHEMM. 


Ve Ee No. 42 


L.. JAPY 


Lae - FRENCH 


Contemporary 


MISTY MORNING ON THE OISE 


In the foreground a man is loading his boat with reeds 
which he is engaged in cutting on a low point of land. 
Beyond him the broad surface of the river extends 
across the picture, on the far shore a hill rises high 
against the sky, and clumps of trees grow on a level 
meadow. The sky is covered with scattered luminous 
clouds and the whole landscape is. veiled in a soft mist. 


Signed at the lower right, Japry. 
Height, 251%, inches; length, 32 inches. 


Owner, Peter A. SCHEMM. 


No. 43 “te 


FREDERICK JAMES 
AMERICAN 


FRANKLIN AND GENERAL BRADDOCK 


Tue famous interview between these two notables is rep- 
resented as taking place in a simple Colonial interior. 
The philosopher, dressed in a long coat of green velvet, 
black waistcoat and breeches, is seated at a gate table, 
while the British officer stands in a characteristic atti- 
tude, back to the fire, holding in one hand a church- 
warden pipe, and gesticulating with the other. In the 
background is a desk littered with papers. Coats and 
hats hang against the wall, together with a map of the 
world. A torn paper on the floor between the figures 
suggests that a heated discussion has taken place. 


Signed at the lower lefi, FrepericK J Ames. 
Height, 231% inches; length, 3014, inches. 


Owner, M. TANENBAUM. 


/ +4 9, —_— No. 44 
F. ANDREOTTI 


WW TesZAZe ITALIAN 
Contemporary 
THE CABARET 


THREE jolly cavaliers, who have been drinking together 
in a wine shop, are making friends with a comely serv- 
ing maid. One of them plays a large lute and sings a 
love song in her ear, while his two companions join in 
the chorus. The costumes are of the early part of the 
seventeenth century. 


Signed at the lower left, F. ANDREOTTI. 
Height, 25 inches; width, 18 inches. 


Owner, WILLIAM SALOMON. 


No. 45 oes 


MME. MARIE COLLAERT 


BELGIAN GLI NED Caf 4 a, 


Contemporary 


THE BARNYARD 


In the foreground, on the right, is a whitewashed stable 
and an adjacent thatched rick, and from the rick ex- 
tends a fence enclosing the barnyard, where a peasant 
woman is feeding her fattening swine. Beyond the en- 
closure a row of trees, with slender branches and sparse 


foliage, rises high against the sky. 


Signed at the lower left, M. CoLuaErt. 
Height, 281%, inches; width, 244, inches. 


Owner, Peter A. SCHEMM. 


N. 46 


0 oe) 
HENDRIK VALKENBURG 


Mur Mtl. PRPS Se. DUTCH 


1826—1896 


MEALTIME 


In a large room, which is evidently used for a kitchen 
and living room, a party of peasants are eating their 
midday meal. The vrouw herself sits at the head of the 
table and behind her on the floor is a small fire, the — 
smoke escaping by means of a large hood suspended 
from the ceiling. On the left in the foreground are 
two carved chests, surrounded by baskets and scattered 
vegetables. In the background a number of leaded win- 
dows let in a modified light which illuminates the in- 


terior. 


Signed at the upper left, H. VALKENBURG. 
Height, 241% inches; length, 33 inches. 


Owner, Peter A. SCHEMM. 


| 


By Henprixk VALKENBURG. 


Mealtime. 


No. 46. 


No. 47 / foo 


PAUL JEAN CLAYS 
BELGIAN , 
1819—1900 


THE RIVER FRONT, ANTWERP 


On the right is a large group of Dutch luggers near 
the quay of the town. The sails flap lazily in the light 
air and they are apparently drifting along with the 
tide or the river current. In the foreground on the right 
are two rowboats, and on the left is a vista down the 
broad river and a glimpse of the shore on the opposite 
side. The sky is filled with soft summer clouds. 


Signed at the lower right, P. J. Crays. 
Height, 23 inches; length, 30 inches. 


Owner, SotoMoN MEHRBACH. 


No. 48 


EVARISTE VITALL LUMINAIS 
Ti \ FRENCH 
Opp be Gully ; 1821—1896 
THE INVASION OF ITALY BY THE GAULS 


A LARGE party of Gallic horsemen, proceeding along a 
narrow gorge in Italy, has been attacked by the inhab- 
itants, and great confusion arises. Men fall from the 
plunging horses, and others seek to defend themselves. 
In the middle distance on the steep slope of a rocky 
eminence are seen straggling figures and above them a 
large party in flight, while in the distance, on a level 
plateau above a high precipice, is an extensive walled 
town. 


Signed at the lower left, Luminais. 
Height, 28 inches; width, 23 inches. 
Owner, PETER A. SCHEMM. 


No. 49 


LEONARD naan N.A. (flo — 
AMERICAN 


1854— VA We LOS ania ge 
MOONLIGHT | 


From the left foreground a country road leads straight 
to a group of houses in the distance between straggling 
trees on either side. On the right is seen a two-wheeled 
cart with a single occupant. The full moon shows itself 
in the sky above the houses, and here and there in the 
sky stars are just beginning to twinkle. 


Signed at the lower left, Leonarp Ocutman, 1889. 
Height, 24 inches; length, 36 inches. 


Owner, M. TANENBAUM. 


No. 50 


pe [0° 
ADOLF SCHREYER 
GERMAN 
ate 1828—1899 


WALLACHIAN PEASANT AND HORSES 


Har mired in a muddy road, which sweeps in a curve 
across a shallow stream in the foreground, stands a rude 
farm wagon drawn by four rough horses, which are evi- 
dently resting at the edge of the water after a tough 
pull. Idly reclining on the coarse mats and robes which 
cover his load is the farmer himself, wearing a broad 
felt hat, short blue waistcoat, red sash and baggy white 
jacket and trousers. Beyond, in the distance, a horse- 
man is approaching along the muddy highway, and on 
the right is a view across a plain to a level horizon. 


Signed at the lower right, Av. SCHREYER. 
Height, 22 inches; length, 37 inches. 


Owner, WILLIAM SALOMON. 


ee ae 


pe oo 


Jou 


| ee 
IeNo. 51 (Ted 


LUIGI LOIR 


AUSTRIAN SE H re 


Contemporary 


ON THE MARNE AT CRETEIL 


Iy the foreground the sandy bank of the broad river 
runs away diagonally to the left, and makes a sharp 
turn to the right under a level point projecting into the 
river, where laundries and bathing houses stand and the 
people gather to take river excursions. On the left a 
large group of trees overhangs and partly conceals a 
number of houses, and on the right, seen across the river, 
is a view across a gently rolling farming country. The 
sky is covered with gray clouds, with the light concen- 
trated around a tiny spot of blue near the zenith. 


Signed at the lower left, Lom Lute. 
Height, 14 inches; length, 36 inches. 


Owner, Peter A. SCHEMM. 


Goo Sie No. 52 


FELIX ZIEM 


Mog Le, ANerSploreG erence 


1821— 


MORNING ON THE LAGOON, VENICE 


On the left a large fleet of boats, with multicolored 
sails, is drifting with the tide, and beyond them rises 
the Campanile of San Giorgio. Near the middle of 
the composition is a fishing craft to which is attached 
the end of a long net which a number of fishermen are 
dragging through the shallow water. The morning sun 
is Just above the horizon, and a broad band of light is 
reflected in the waters of the lagoon sparkling down 


to the near foreground. 


Signed at the lower left, Zrem. 
Height, 191, inches; length, 321% inches. 


Owner, Peter A. SCHEMM. 


way xtmagq AG ‘aoway ‘uoosnyT ay, uo Suusopy “SG ‘ON : 


sr 


RUDOLF ERNST 


GERMAN : 
Contemporary OR ffx 


THE SENTINELS 


A tatu Moor, wearing richly embroidered garments, is 
standing in a highly decorated doorway of a Moorish 
palace, and beside him, its front paws hanging over 
the low step, lies a huge tiger. Behind the group in the 
gloom of the interior may be distinguished a doorway 
leading to an interior apartment, and on either side 
of the doorway are marble panels with inscriptions and 


decorations in low relief. 


Signed at the lower right, R. Ernst. 
Height, 311% inches; width, 221%, inches. 


Owner, Peter A. ScHEMM. 


No. 54 
3 90 — 


JAMES G. TYLER 
AMERICAN 


OVERDUE 


A SIDE-WHEEL steamer, flying the American flag at 
the peak, with two funnels, and two masts on which one 
or two sails are set, is buffeting its way along a tum- 
bling sea, towing behind it a screw steamer partly dis- 
masted and evidently quite disabled. The rigging of 
both steamers is covered with ice, and the level-drifting 
smoke and the spume on the water show that the gale is 
very severe. 


Signed at the lower left, James G. Ty er. 
Height, 40 inches; length, 60 inches. 


Owner, M. TANENBAUM. 


No. 55 J6 0 


EUGENE J OSEPH VERBOECKHOVEN 
BELGIAN 


1799—1881 vd W cl 4a a7 : 


SHEEP AND FOWL 


A Ewe, with her two lambs, is solicitously watching one 
of them, which is lying down near her on the straw-lit- 
tered floor of a rude stable. Nearby two fowl seek food 
among the straw. In the background is a rude hayrack 
against a timbered and plaster wall. The little group 
is strongly lighted from the left. 


Signed at the lower right, Huck NE VERBOECKHOVEN Fv. 1886. 


Height, 281% inches; width, 23 inches. 


Owner, Sotomon MEnRBACH. 


No. 56 


VED. ALBERT BIERSTADT, N.A. 
AMERICAN 


CS. Ai Clemw 1830—1902 


WESTERN KANSAS IN_ 1860 


A narrow river flows through a level country where tall 
oaks and other deciduous trees grow here and there im 
coppices and clumps, and broad, open pastures extend 
in every direction. A herd of buffalo, led by a huge bull, 
wanders along the river bank, apparently enjoying the 
paradise of rich food and cool water. The sun is near 
the horizon and the warm glow of sunset floods the 
landscape, touching here and there the foliage and the 
edges of the soft clouds which partly cover the sky. 


Signed at the lower left, /Brersrapr. 
Height, 28 inches; length, 391, inches. 


Owner, M. TANENBAUM. 


By Avzsertr Brierstapt, N.A. 


Western Kansas in 1860. 


No. 56. 


S 


. ed 
es, on 

+ ai RES pi 
ae eG 


No. 57 
NICOLAS MATHES Ve ff ae 
GERMAN 
Contemporary FU JA f Are 


CHRISTMAS EVE 


A LITTLE girl dressed in coarse garments, and huddling 
her arms in a scanty shawl to keep her hands warm, 
leans against the window of a toy shop, turning her 
eyes longingly toward the interior, from which a flood 
of light falls upon the little figure, casting a shadow 
upon the snow-covered sidewalk. In the window are dis- 


played numerous toys and dolls, and on the right of 
the figure, seen past the corner, are high buildings bor- 
dering the opposite side of the street, with here and 
there lighted windows high up in the facades. 


Signed at the top, N. Marues. 
Height, 40 inches; width, 27 inches. 


Owner, Peter A. SCHEMM. 


oo No. 58 


MIHALY DE MUNKACSY 
HUNGARIAN 
oe 1 
AFTER THE DESSERT 


In a sumptuous interior a large family has just fin- 
ished dinner, and the servant brings in a basket con- 
taining a litter of small puppies, around which the 
children gather and fondle the little animals, while the 
older folk look on with interest. The figures are dressed 
in the style of the seventeenth century and the furniture 
and the accessories are in harmony with the costumes. 
The scene is lighted from a lofty window on the left 
of the composition. 


Signed at the lower right, M. pe Munxacsy. 
Height, 28 inches; length, 40 inches. 


Owner, Peter A. SCHEMM. 


ASOVUNAJ Ga AIVHIP AG ‘guassaq ay, 4a1fP “8G ‘ON 


: 


comer 


No. 59 Id — 


BENJAMIN CONSTANT 


FRENCH cé of C YD, pnt ass 


1845—1902 


ON THE HOUSETOPS, ALGIERS 


A apy is seated on the housetop of a native resi- 
dence in the town of Algiers, accompanied by her 
little child and attended by four female attendants, 
three of whom are perched on a wall above, and the 
fourth leans over the parapet nearby. On the right and 
far below are seen the roofs of neighboring houses, 
and the broad expanse of the Mediterranean, with here 
and there a white sail. 


Signed at the lower left, BENsAMIN CONSTANT. 
Height, 38 inches; width, 231, inches. 


Owner, WILLIAM SALOMON. 


JEHAN GEORGES VIBERT 
FRENCH 


A Gree r 1840—1902 


GULLIVER AND THE LILLIPUTIANS 


Tue figure of Gulliver is lying at full length on a 
gently sloping hillside, and around him is assembled a 
large multitude of Lilliputians in gay-colored costumes, 
who, having fastened the invader to the ground by 
means of cords, are engaged in curiously examining 
every detail of their captive’s costume and possessions. 
In the foreground a number have brought his watch 
to a safe distance in a hand barrow, and are examining 
the works. High up on the waist of Gulliver a party of 
workmen are engaged in lifting his pistol by means of 
a derrick, and in the distance, on the right, is gathered 
an immense army covering a broad field, while on the 
left, and seen over the ankle and right foot of Gulliver, 
is a mass of soldiers surrounding an elephant, with a 
view of the sea beyond. 


Signed at the lower right, J. G. ViBert. 
Height, 221%, inches; length, 431% inches. 


Owner, Peter A. SCHEMM. 


2, LUGdIA saouody NvHaAG Ag ‘sunyndypyT ay, pup saayjny *—(9 ‘ON 


‘ ft 
“a 
of eae s FAR . 


A ss ‘ ; ; ee 


PLAN ae ii ALB OH I ete Nc as AR ARAB Do ASA Ae MATISSE TAL areca ios Ohio Rabe ia 


No. 61 


FS 3d — 
TITO CONTI | 
ITALIAN Miss Se a 
Contemporary 


THE BRIDAL PAIR 


A FAIR-HAIRED young bride leans lovingly on the arm of 
her husband, and the pair, intent on each other, have 
just descended a flight of steps and are walking through 
the vestibule of a sumptuously decorated mansion. The 
figures are dressed in the costumes of the early seven- 


teenth century, the bride wearing a wine-colored velvet 
bodice and overskirt, with an embroidered petticoat of 
salmon satin, and the young bridegroom wearing a buff 
coat, green breeches, and long, brown leather riding 
boots. 


Signed at the lower left, 'Trro Cont. 
Height, 35 inches; width, 26 inches. 


Owner, WILLIAM SALOMON. 


Vegi “s No. 62 


BERNARD DE HOOG 


beat Wow. i ee DUTCH 


Contemporary 


A HUMBLE HOME 


In a rude cottage, presumably in a village of the Neth- 
erlands, a peasant and his wife are seated near a small 
table, the former eating his frugal supper, and the lat- 
ter suckling a small infant. The furniture of the room 
is of the most meagre description, and everything sug- 
gests a life full of toil with slight reward. In the fore- 
ground a patch of sunlight falls upon the rough floor 
and its reflected glow illuminates the whole interior. 


Signed at the lower left, BeErNarp pE Hooe. 
Height, 311%, inches; length, 39 inches. 


Owner, Peter A. SCHEMM. 


No. 63 


LY- G Op 
WILHELM MEYERHEIM 
GERMAN AW Ma: , 


1814—1882 


OLD CITY ON THE RHINE 


On a gently sloping sandy beach, near which two boats 
float in the quiet waters of the broad river, is a market 
cart with a number of peasants engaged in loading 
baskets of fruit. On a higher level is seen the beginning 
of a populous and picturesque street, with tall steep- 
roofed houses, with turrets and overhanging stories, and 
beyond, in the distance, the towers of two large churches. 
On the right of the composition is the broad expanse of 
the Rhine, the shores visible on either side, and churches 
and other lofty edifices in silhouette against a luminous 


sky. 


Signed at the lower right, W. MryEerHeio. 
Height, 27 inches; length, 38 inches. 


Owner, PETER A. SCHEMM. 


No. 64 
GO 


BERNARD DE HOOG 


mas Nz YY ze DUTCH 


Contemporary 


PREPARING THE MEAL 


A Durcu vrouw is busy peeling potatoes, seated near 
a window, her infant in a pulpit chair nearby and a 
small child standing at her knee. In front of the figures, 
on the right, is a rude table with a few coarse dishes, 
over which a lamp is suspended. The interior is lighted 
from a window at the left, the lower part of which is 


covered by a muslin curtain. 


Signed at the lower right, BErNarD DE Hooe. 
Height, 39 inches; length, 49 inches. 
Owner, PETER A. SCHEMM. 


Pore 2X 


‘OOOF] Ad auvNuag Ag ‘yoapy ayy Susvdaiqg ‘F9 “ON 


No. 65 Ed ea 


PROFESSOR OTTO VON KAMEKE ; 


GERMAN uae Yip 


Contemporary 


THE JUNGFRAU 


In the foreground is a pleasant little valley through 
which a narrow stream meanders under the trees and 
among the rocks, and part of its water is diverted to 
run a small mill. Tree-covered slopes rise on either side, 
and in the distance towers high against the sky the 
huge crag of the Jungfrau, topped with a pyramid of 


snow and flanked by enormous glaciers. 


Signed at the lower right, O. v. Kamexe, 72. 
Height, 3714 inches; length, 53 inches. 


Owner, Peter A. ScHEMM. 


ZY) fA No. 66 


J. HORENBANT 
DUTCH 
A Grrr : Contemporary 
A HOLLAND HOME INTERIOR 


Aw old peasant couple are seated at their midday meal 
in a characteristic Dutch room with hooded fireplace, 
rude oven and roughly timbered ceiling. A shaft of sun- 
light, falling through a small window, falls upon the 
floor beyond the seated pair, and the warm light touches 
the figures, the different objects in the interior, and is 
reflected in the shadows. 


Signed at the lower right, J. HorENBANT, 91. 
Height, 3914 inches; width, 35 inches. 


Owner, PETER A. SCHEMM. 


HorENBANT 


By J 


tor. 


A Holland Home Inter 


No. 66. 


No. 67 25a a 


PROFESSOR JOSEF BRANDT 
POLISH 


1841— Weze Kececg */ 


POLISH SOLDIERS CAPTURING A TURK 


Two irregular Polish cavalrymen, in one of the numer- 
ous conflicts between the Turks and the Christians in 
medieval times, have come across a straggling Turk in 
a broad open plain, and one of the soldiers, having las- 
soed him around the body, has dragged him from his 
horse and is hauling him along the ground. The second 
soldier, meantime, attempts to capture the frightened 
steed of the enemy. 


Signed at the lower right, JoseEr Branpt, Warsaw, 1881. 
i? Height, 43%, inches; length, 79 inches. 


Owner, WILLIAM SALOMON. 


SHO es Mis No. 68 
LEON BRUNIN 
BELGIAN 


TH - oy fe ’ Contemporary 


DIVIDING THE SPOILS 


A company of seventeenth century soldiers are engaged 
in dividing the booty which they have gathered in a 
captured town. Two of them are throwing dice on a 
drumhead. A companion lights his pipe at a lantern, 
another pours wine from a flask, and a third is engaged 
in tying up a tattered banner. In the background are 
seen the facades, gables and turrets of a large town, 
with a crenellated and loopholed wall. 


Signed at the lower right, Leon Brunin, ANTWERPEN. 
Height, 47 inches; length, 65 inches. 


Owner, Perer A. SCHEMM. 


‘NINaAUg Now] <q ‘spodg ay, sumpwaqd ‘89 ‘ON 


hath EERE ale 2. wet Ran po entbacah Store ee AS be 


No. 69 fe pee 


Prete. TAIT. NuA. 


AMERICAN GEG 7a gp 


' 1819—1905 


EARLY BIRDS — 


A sroop of newly hatched chickens is basking in the 
sunlight. Some of them are crouched in the grass, and 
others are perched on the moss-covered branch of a 
fallen tree. A few of them, inspired by curiosity, peck 
at scattered grains of wheat. 


Signed at the lower right, A. F. Tarr, N.A., N. Y. 797. 
Height, 934 inches; length, 14 inches. 


Owner, M. TANENBAUM. 


SECOND EVENING’S SALE 
FRIDAY, MARCH 2p, 1906 
AT MENDELSSOHN HALL 


BEGINNING PROMPTLY AT 8.30 oO’CLOCK 


No. 70 JO 


FRANZ STREITT 
AUSTRIAN bs ? 
1839— ee, 
THE ACCIDENT 


A party of strolling musicians, making their way from 
one village to another on a winter’s day, are just cross- 
ing a bridge. The old bass-viol player has slipped and 
fallen upon his back. A sleigh full of people drawn by 
two horses is rapidly approaching along the road, and 
the trombone player, waving his instrument high above 
his head, shouts a warning to them as they approach. 


Signed at the lower left, F. Srrerrr, Mtncnen. 
Height, 81, inches; length, 1614 inches. 


Owner, M. TANENBAUM. 


No. 71 
/SU — FRANCOIS FLAMENG 
AL. het FRENCH 
ne 1859— 


FLIRTATION 


SEATED on a half-round exedra overhanging a deep 
valley with a mountain barrier beyond, are two figures, 
a young man and a young woman, in late eighteenth 
century costumes. The young lady is half reclining on 
the bench, holding her fan in one hand and resting her 
head on the knee of her lover, who is perched upon the 
back of the seat. On the left of the group is a carved 
stone griffin, forming the end of the exedra, and above 
it is a fragment of the decorated base of a monument. 


Signed at the lower right, Francois FLAMENG. 
Height, 15 inches; width, 10 inches. 


Owner, WiLtIAM SALOMON. 


se ee 


No. 72. 
i yo. 


E. BERNE-BELLECOUR 


FRENCH | eet 
1838— Bes Vee 


PLANNING 


A youne officer, apparently on a pilgrimage from one 
post to another, pauses for a moment on a country road 
to look across the distant sea, where an ironclad is dimly 
seen in the distance. The figure is turned away from the 
spectator, the face being seen in profil perdu, and a 
sandy bank forms a low barrier between the road and 
the sea. 


Signed at the lower left, KE. Berne-BELLEcour. 
Height, 1434 inches; width, 1014 inches. 


Owner, M. TANENBAUM. 


_—~ No. 73 
F DJS oe O rr 
JEHAN GEORGES VIBERT 


Ger es ro FRENCH 


1840—1902 


THE YOUNG CARDINAL 
Water Color 


A youTHFUL cardinal in full robes, holding with his 
left hand his stick, his hat and his gloves, stands, rais- 
ing with his right hand a pair of eyeglasses, which he 
is apparently gazing at as a novelty. The background 
is a modified tone of gray, against which the figure is 
soberly relieved. 


Signed at the lower right, J. G. Vipert. 


Height, 934 inches; width, 71% inches. 
Owner, M. TANENBAUM. 


No. 74 


JEAN JACQUES HENNER Veen 
FRENCH : 2 
1829—1905 in li/ ba aee 
THE WEEPING MAGDALEN 


Tuts is a full-length kneeling figure of a golden-haired 
maiden, the upper part of her body undraped and the 
lower part covered by a black mantle. The figure is seen . 
in profile, and kneeling upon both knees, the maiden, 
with bowed head, covers her face with her hands. 


Signed at the lower right, J. J. HENNER. 
Height, 10 inches; width, 84% inches. 


Owner, WiLLIAM SALOMON. 


No. 75 


PON ak as: 
JEAN JACQUES HENNER 
‘ FRENCH 
Gj ‘ Lechner 1829—1905 
HEAD 


Tuis is a study of a young girl in profile, with flowing 
auburn hair. The head is turned to the left and some- 
what inclined downwards, the light falling strongly 
from the upper left, and bringing into strong relief 
against the dark background the tones of the flesh and a 
blue bodice, which is cut low in the neck. 


Signed at the left, J. J. HENNER. 
Height, 10% inches; width, 71%, inches. 
Owner, M. TANENBAUM. 


2 ote FO 
GIEE Cesk cof Aare Vr 
JZ “ey 


No. 76 F 70 — 


ALBERTO PASINI 


ITALIAN VU: Lj PS biapen 


1826—1899 


MARKET SCENE, CONSTANTINOPLE 


Ix an open space near a mosque is a street market with 
venders of pottery and fruit, and various articles of 
common use. Near the entrance to the mosque a group 
of men and women are gathered around a little booth, 
sheltered under two colored umbrellas. A number of 
horses from which the riders have dismounted stand 
nearby. Above the group rises a straggling tree, which 
is in strong relief against the white facade of a build- 
ing beyond the mosque and the clear blue sky above. 


Signed at the lower right, A. Pasin1, 1881. 
Height, 14 inches; width, 11 inches. 


Owner, M. TANENBAUM. 


37S : No. 77 


HUGUES MERLE 
AY. FRENCH 
1823—1881 
A BRITTANY INTERIOR 


Tis is a study of a large kitchen in a Brittany house 
with a large number of figures engaged in various occu- 
pations. In the foreground two children are playing 
with a goat. On the left two women, a young man and 
a small child are assembled near a table, on which are 
three earthen bowls, and in the background by the fire 
are the farmer and his wife. Various articles of carved 
furniture are ranged along the wall, and the shelf of 
the huge mantelpiece bears a number of brass and cop- 
per utensils. The scene is strongly lighted from a small 
window on the left. 


Signed at the lower right, \MERLE. 
Height, 141% inches; length, 18 inches. 


Owner, Peter A. SCHEMM. 


No. 78 


E. BERNE-BELLECOUR B29 — 
FRENCH 


OFF DUTY 


A younce soldier, evidently off duty, for he has no side 
arms and no sign of rank, is standing on a short flight 
of stone steps which mount between masonry walls and 
lead to a street, the main approach to a town which is | 
seen in the horizon beyond the figure. He wears a red 
and blue kepi and blue undress jacket, red breeches and 
riding boots, and holds a small riding whip in his left 
hand. 


Signed at the lower right, E. Berne-BELLecovr. 
Height, 14 inches; width, 1014 inches. 


Owner, M. TANENBAUM. 


G nf — No. 79 


ALBERTO PASINI 
AS, ITALIAN 
orth y ; - 1826—1899 
MOORISH MARKET PLACE 


Near the low entrance to the courtyard of a mosque, 
which adjoins a lofty palace, is a large group of men 
and women and several horses from which the riders 
have dismounted. In the foreground beside a shallow 
pool of water is a seated group of street merchants 
apparently awaiting purchasers of their melons and 
other fruit. On the left of the composition a low wall ex- 
tends out of the picture, and two horses, bridled and 
saddled, are fastened near an open doorway. 


Signed at the lower right, A. Pasrnt. 
Height, 13°4 inches; length, 1984 inches. 
Owner, M. TANENBAUM. ; ef 
F F2C Co2et GAY WSS Labor 
4A MT. fr ZOSX 


No. 80 


VAs, LoS apie 
MARIE DIETERLE 
FRENCH Cb2C: We hes 


CATTLE 


Two cows, one white and one spotted, the former lying 
down and the latter standing nearby, are resting in a 
marshy pasture. Behind them is the edge of a coppice, 
and to the right is a vista across a broad pasture with 
cattle feeding here and there. The sky is partly cov- 
ered by soft summer clouds. 


Signed at the lower left, Marte Diererte. 
Height, 1634 inches; width, 12°, inches. 


Owner, M. TANENBAUM. 


F)S— No. 81 
THEODORE ROUSSEAU 
FRENCH 


WW Gulls s 1812—1867 


LANDSCAPE 


From the middle of the foreground a broad, deeply 
rutted country road leads straight away to the middle 
distance and curves around under large oak trees in 
autumn foliage, beyond which is the shimmering expanse 
of a broad, quiet river, with meadows on either side and 
a rank of lofty trees in the distance against the sum- 
mer sky. Cattle are feeding here and there under the 
trees, and the landscape is enlivened with various figures, 
one of which, a peasant carrying a net over his shoulder, 
and accompanied by a dog, is a prominent object in the 
middle of the composition. 


Signed at the lower left, TH. Rousseau. 
Height, 91% inches; length, 15 inches. 


Owner, Estate of the late Henry STEERs. 


No. 82 


Ld ae 


ALFRED STEVENS 


Me olan Oat Gabo 


THE SAILBOAT, TREPORT 


Drirtine in a light breeze across the twinkling waters 
of the Channel is a small sloop with two or three occu- 
pants. A mass of storm clouds extends across the top of 
the picture, and below them is seen a rolling mass of 
ruddy vapor glowing in the light of the setting sun. 


Signed at the lower left, ¢orevens. 
Height, 111% inches; length, 16 inches. 


Owner, Peter A. ScHEMM. 


No. 83 
6 Joa — : 
E. SANCHEZ-PERRIER 


Hii hkoott ' SPANISH 


LANDSCAPE 


A pLacip stream extends across the foreground and 
winds around a low point, where tufts of coarse grass 
grow among the sand, and disappears among a thick 
growth of weeds in the middle distance. A boat with a 
single oarsman is floating near the shore, where a peas- 
ant woman and a small girl stand, apparently waiting to 
go aboard. The tiled roofs and gables of a large town 
are seen over the willows on the right, and on the left 
grow birches, which rise high against the sky. 


Signed at the lower left, EK. SaNcHEZ-PERRIER. 
Height, 1514, inches; width, 11%, inches. 
Owner, M. TANENBAUM. Lb per Boece 


ie Cog , A400 K footed 
KBE A foce(to fut ) fp oF" 


fr poe & aan f- AeS Ke 


Jeet fr 


No. 84 


F. ANDREOTTI LOL 
ITALIAN 


Contemporary Lé Nhat < 


THE PAGE 


A YOUTH, in page’s costume of white satin doublet with 
slashed sleeves, shot-silk breeches, flesh-colored stock- 
ings and white satin slippers, stands leaning against a 
table in a passageway, holding a large felt hat in one 
hand and resting the other upon a large sword, evi- 
dently waiting to hand both these articles to his master. 
The background is a wall covered with a rich red hang- 
ing, and on the left is the corner of a tapestry with a 
figure composition. 


Signed at the upper right, F. ANDREOTTI. 
Height, 16 inches; width, 12 inches. 


Owner, WILLIAM SALOMON. 


No. 85 


JULES WORMS 
y \ FRENCH 


fa ae s 1837— 


FORBIDDEN FRUIT 


A Spanisu youth, dressed in elaborate costume embroid- 
ered in gay colors, is standing near the entrance of a 
house, having deposited his blunderbuss against the 
wall, while he chaffs a pert and pretty maiden who is 
about to eat an orange. Behind the young man a pack 
mule is standing, and lying on the ground nearby is a 
part of its burden. 


Signed at the lower right, J. Worms. 
Height, 1614 inches; width, 12%, inches. 


Owner, M. TANENBAUM. 


eS 


=> eee 


No. 86 
HENRIETTA RONNER 27 Ho 


BELGIAN Pat y cee 


1821— 


WHILE FRIENDS QUARREL 
THE ENEMY SECURES THE PRIZE 


A wuitE lapdog perched on a piano stool, about to 
steal cake from the tea-table, is interrupted by an en- 
vious companion which attempts to usurp its place. 
While the two dogs are disputing, a sleck cat steals 
upon the table and eats the cake. 


Signed at the lower right, Henrirerra Ronnenr. 


Height, 13 inches; length, 1734 inches. 


Owner, M. TANENBAUM. 


No. 87 


TG Oe 


Ei” L. HENR YoeeNeae 
AMERICAN 


Hleeder Ee 1841— 


GENERAL BURGOYNE’S 
MARCH DOWN THE HUDSON 


On the left of the composition is the broad expanse of 
the Hudson, sweeping around between wooded islands 
until it is lost in the distance, where a ridge of moun- 
tains meets the sky. Floating with the current are flat- 
boats filled with soldiers and horses. On the bank of 
the river, moving along a road beneath rows of tall 
trees, is a large detachment of troops in two columns, 
with artillery and baggage wagons. On the crest of a 
low hill, in the distance beyond the troops on the road, 
is a flanking party of cavalry, and in the immediate — 
foreground, on a rocky point overhanging the river, 
stands the general himself, and another officer, convers- 
ing with a party of three armed Indians, who are ap- 
parently pointing out the river channel. 


Signed at the lower left, E. L. Henry. 
Height, 12 inches; length, 22 inches. 


Owner, M. TANENBAUM. 


ee Te see 


By E. L. Henry, N.A. 


General Burgoyne’s March down the Hudson. 


NOS 1. 


No. 88 
Valea, 


JEAN CHARLES CAZIN 


FRENCH Str? 


1840—1891 


THE DEPARTURE OF NIGHT 


From the middle of the foreground a broad roadway, 
deeply rutted and rough, curves away to the left, and 
then disappears behind a clump of bushes between a 
whitewashed cottage and a large tiled barn. The moon- 
light falls from the upper left and illuminates the scene 
with almost the strength of sunshine, while a few stars 


sparkle in the cloudless sky. 


Signed at the lower right, J. C. Cazin. 
Height, 15% inches; length, 1814, inches. 


er ean cnet hh MT BKK 


No. 89 


FH OO 
ARTHUR F. TAIT. ONS 


AMERICAN 


Ylrrawe r 
NL 1819—1905 


SHEEP AND DOG 


In the foreground a small flock of sheep are sunning 
themselves after a morning’s browse in a rich pasture. 
Three of them are standing up and the remainder lying 
down, while a spotted sheep-dog lies upon a flat rock 
nearby, languidly watching the animals. In the distance 
is a pleasant pasture land with a coppice beyond, and 
a glimpse of a valley still farther away. 


Signed at the lower right, A. F. Tarr, N.A., N. Y., 97. 
Height, 171% inches; length, 2614 inches. 


Owner, M. TANENBAUM. 


No. 90 


JULES WORMS er 
FRENCH 
1837— 


THE DEPARTURE FOR THE HUNT 


A DASHING young Spanish cavalier, mounted on a gayly 
caparisoned black pony, is waving an adieu to his sefio- 
rita at the door of her mansion. Behind the cavalier 
stand two companions, one armed with a brass blunder- 
buss, and just about to mount the entrance steps on 
the right is a peasant girl bearing a coarse earthen jar. 


Signed at the lower left, J. Worms. 
Height, 18%, inches; length, 22 inches. 


Owner, M. TANENBAUM. 


— 


YI No. 91 


THOMAS MORAN, N.A. 
AMERICAN 


ly Maho nie 1837— 


VENICE FROM THE GIUDECCA 


Own the left the palaces border the southern island of 
the Giudecca, with two groups of boats with colored 
sails and many passengers. On the right, seen beyond 
scattered craft of various sorts, is a part of the Riva, 
the Ducal Palace, the Campanile and the palaces be- 
yond. The sun is about to sink into a bank of clouds 
near the horizon, and a warm flood of light illuminates 
the scene. High in the heavens shines the narrow cres- 
cent of the new moon. 


Signed at the lower left, HORAN, 1897. 
Height, 1914 inches; length, 2914 inches. 


Owner, M. TANENBAUM. 


__ 


No. 92 Vi San 


JEHAN GEORGES VIBERT 


HiliPhccas 
‘ a<y 


1840—1902 


THE PALACE COURTYARD 


Aw Oriental dignitary, in ample fur-trimmed robes, and 
wearing a profusion of silver ornaments, is leaning 
against a wall, and, clasping his hands over his chest, 
is indolently watching the billing and cooing of several 
doves, some of which are perched upon a marble foun- 
tain nearby, and others are conducting their courtships 
on the tiled floor. 


Signed at the lower right, J. G. Viperr. 
Height, 244, inches; width, 16 inches. 


Owner, SoromMonN MEHRBACH. 


Coen No. 93 


DANIEL RIDGWAY KNIGHT 
AMERICAN 

AG ates 

THE FISHER GIRL 


In the foreground is the full-length figure of a sturdy 
fisher maiden, leaning upon the handle of a rude shrimp 
net, with her empty basket hanging from her shoulders. 
She is dressed in coarse, rough garments, with patches 
of many colors, and wears a yellow kerchief on her 
head. Beyond her is seen an expanse of flats just left 
by the tide, and on the water’s edge in the distance stand 
two other fisher girls waiting for the tide to fall still 
farther. The sky is covered with soft lumimous gray 
clouds. 


Signed at the lower right, Ripeway Kwicurt, 1887. 
Height, 22 inches; width, 18 inches. 


Owner, WILLIAM SALOMON. 


No. 94 ee CO _—- 
JEHAN GEORGES VIBERT 
FRENCH wpe) ee 


1840—1902 


THE GARDENER’S BOUQUET 


Aw old gardener has arranged, with more pride than 
taste, a huge rich bouquet of various flowers, sur- 
mounted by a geranium heart pierced by an arrow made 
from a large leaf. The author of this bouquet contem- 
plates with great satisfaction a carnation which he 
holds in his right hand. Behind the figure and the bou- 
quet is a dense mass of foliage and the corner of a 
mansion or chateau. 


Signed at the lower left, J. G. Viperr. 
Height, 22%, imches; width, 161% inches. 


Owner, M. TANENBAUM. Vol Saw Tg FS 
ca, “eae ly. 0? hI A 


af" YG nucte¥* 


No. 95 
Ce 


CHARLES EMILE JACQUE 
aa bypree FRENCH 
‘i 
1813—1894 
THE FLOCK 


A SHEPHERDESS, accompanied by her dog, is seated at 
the foot of a large oak, the advance guard of a dense 
forest, while her flock of sheep feeds on the coarse grass 
nearby. The sunlight strikes the scene from the upper 
left, strongly accentuating the tree trunk, the figure of 
the shepherdess, the sheep, and here and there the foliage 
and verdure in the landscape. 


Signed at the lower left, Cu. Jacque. 
Height, 15 inches; length, 181%, inches. 


Owner, Peter A. SCHEMM. 


oo 


| ; GNvOVeE AINA satuvHD Kg ‘49077 9YL ‘G6 ‘ON 


oe RMS Sn, 


No. 96 F660 


JULES WORMS 
FRENCH 


1837— Sf aS? 


SWEET PROPOSALS 


In the patio of a Spanish house a traveller has just dis- 
mounted, and, met by a servant girl, he seizes her 
around the waist by one arm and attempts to give her 
a kiss. Both the figures wear elaborate and character- 
istic costumes, and over the saddle of the horse, which 
stands quietly near the entrance steps, is thrown a rich 
poncho with long fringe. 


Signed at the lower left, J. Worms. 
Height, 18 inches; width 14%, inches. 


Owner, M. TANENBAUM. 


VA LER EE se No. 97 


JEAN CHARLES CAZIN 


Vie Yar ei ' FRENCH 


1840—1891 


THE GARDEN 


In the foreground is a garden devoted to the cultivation 
of flowers in beds. On the right is a mass of asters 
growing together, and on the left a patch of carnations, 
in which a young woman is engaged in tending the 
plants and picking the flowers. Beyond the garden on a 
slight elevation is a large residence with adjacent barns 
and a cottage not far away. A few small clouds float in 
the sky near the zenith. 


Signed at the lower left, J. C. Cazin. 
Height, 121%, inches; length, 16 inches. 


Owner, Peter A. ScHEMM. 


oS scat 


By Jean CuHarwes Cazin 


The Garden. 


No. 97. 


No. 98 


cs ee 
H. J. DELPY (C Gin 


FRENCH Jia Yp : 
eS 


THE RIVER MARNE 


A BROAD, placid river extends across the foreground, 
broken on the left by a point covered by sedge and 
weeds, and across the river on the opposite bank grow 
tall, slender trees near the water’s edge. A boat with 
two occupants is floating on the stream in the middle 
distance, and the horizon line is formed by a ridge of 
small hills seen against a quiet sunset sky. 


Signed at the lower right, H. J. Devry. 
Height, 21 inches; length, 25 inches. 


Owner, Petver A. SCHEMM. 


No. 99 


OOO: Jie JEAN BAPTISTE CAMILLE COROT 
FRENCH 
Veter (eo 1796—1875 
(me oSOO 
THE GLADE 


A NARROW rippling stream runs out of the foreground _ 
on the right between low grass-covered banks, and on 
the left a large clump of trees rises out of the picture 
from among large bowlders. In the middle distance under 
a group of tall slender beeches, in the mystery of early 
twilight, stand two lovers with clasped hands, and be- 
yond them, between the tree trunks, is a glimpse of a 
luminous sunset sky. | 


Signed at the lower left, Coror. 
Height, 21 inches; width, 174% inches. 


Owner, SOLOMON heyy Ae 2 


@ 23s3 Leet pH MSS Ges% 


(A ¥SJ, A2¥ xxfr-~) G cs rce) 
Nonetee tO 00¢- 4174 


The Glade 


By Jean Baptiste CamiItutE Corot 


No. 99. 


Fil 


yy 


No. 100 : Joo heats 


JULES ADOLPHE GRISON 


| FRENCH 
Contemporary Zs 4 C7, f 


THE NEW COAT 


Two bourgeois citizens have brought their son, a lad of 
about ten years, to a tailor to be fitted with a new 
green silk coat, and the youngster, under the hands of 
the tailor, stands in an uncomfortable attitude, while 
his father and mother, the former seated and the latter 
standing, watch the operation of fitting, with an air 
of superior knowledge. The costumes are of the period 
of the Directory, but the porcelain stove, the pipe, the 
tankards and various other articles around the room 
suggest that the motive for the picture was found in 


Germany. 


Signed at the lower right, Grison. 
Height, 18 inches; length, 21 inches. 


Owner, M. TANENBAUM. Gtk Jobe fr 7 


Kve aes 


hoo — No. 101 


CARL LUDWIG FRIEDRICH BECKER 
GERMAN 


fe 4G. WIL pe : 1820— 


A CUP OF TEA 


A comeE.y, fair-haired young maiden is seated at a 
table raising a porcelain cup with her right hand, and 
with her left: steadying the saucer. The figure, which is 
nearly life-size, is seen to the waist only. Her fair hair 
is bound to her head by a blue silk band, which fastens 
a tea-rose just above her ear. From a narrow black rib- 
bon around her neck hangs a large pearl pendant, and 
a thin lace fichu is draped over her shoulders, falling 
with a deep lace edge over a striped silk bodice, with full 
half-sleeves. 


Signed at the lower left, C. BecKEr. 
Height, 25 inches; width, 181, inches. 


Owner, W1LLIAM SALOMON. 


No. 102 


MARC LOUIS BENJAMIN VAUTIER 


GERMAN 


1829—1898 


THE WEDDING FEAST 


In a pleasant garden, under an extemporized tent made 
of canvas attached to the branches of trees, is assem- 
bled a large company of peasants to celebrate the wed- 
ding of two of their number. The bridal couple stand 
near a table in the foreground, on which are various 
dishes and beer glasses, while around them sit their 
friends and relatives. A little farther away, a merry 
company is dancing to the music of a small orchestra 


perched high on a small platform in the background. 


Signed at the lower left, B. Vautier. 
Height, 161% inches; length, 21 inches. 


Owner, PeTer A. SCHEMM. 


be Sine ; No. 103 


CHARLES EMILE JACQUE 


af Bes 7S) ih ees FRENCH 


1813—1894 


SHEEP—NEAR FONTAINEBLEAU 


In the foreground is a large flock of sheep brow — 
the scanty herbage of a rough pasture, att 
shepherdess who stands just beyond them 

path which winds away until lost in the m 


Behind the shepherdess is a rank of * and a 


foliage extending out of the top of u 

tween the tree trunks is a glimpse of the sky ma 
summer clouds, and to the left of the shepherdess is a 
vista over a level, open country. 


Signed at the lower left, Cu. Jacque. 
Height, 25 inches; width, 201% inches. 
Owner, SoLtomon MEHRBACH. 


GS? LY ; ougtn frr- 


acon — 


Sot ot Mt K7Ge Sale (l93 fAT CI#uUmnes 


No. 103. Sheep—wNear Fontamebleau 


a 
By Cuarites Emite Jacquet 


No. 104 


EE 
JEAN JACQUES HENNER 
FRENCH 


1829—1905 


THE DREAMER 


Turis is a life-size study, in profile, of a young girl with 
a mass of flowing auburn hair, wearing a red jacket with 
full sleeves. The head is slightly lowered and the eyes 
upraised. The figure is in strong effect of light and 
shade, and in contrast against a deep-toned background. 


Signed at the lower left, J. J. HENNER. 
Height, 24 inches; width, 18 inches. 


Owner, PETER A. SCHEMM. 


NM K r€e 7P 7d ~ fre. SSAR .« Wetel. £. Tome 
aesx South Hang Sac bt fraseK 
C030 Sven Grist tboau Feet C7 SO — /¥- cH, 


90 LP (ryt fur WE frate fra on SK « See ( 
Cie Greet, MW xx, 


Se No. 105 


EMILE JEAN HORACE VERNET 
FRENCH 


ESN GOK. igre. 1789—1863 


AUSTRIAN PRISONERS FORCED TO WORK 


In the foreground a young soldier, his blue and white 
uniform somewhat ragged, is walking in a dejected atti- 
tude beside a pair of oxen, resting his bandaged left 
hand on a rude yoke by which the sturdy animals are 
drawing a plough guided by a man in peasant garb. In 
the middle distance, on the right, is a large stone build- 
ing, at the door of which are an Italian gendarme on 
guard and a wounded French Zouave helped along by 
a peasant woman; and on the left, and beyond the fore- 
ground group, a number of Austrian soldiers are en- 
gaged in spreading manure over a field to be ploughed. 
A range of mountains seen across a broad, rolling coun- 


try forms the horizon. 


Signed at the lower right, H. Vernet, 1861. 


Height, 351%, inches; width, 28 inches. 


No. 106 


Y fae 
EK. L. HENRY, N.A. at 


AMERICAN i Up aI 


1841— 


THE CHILDHOOD OF RAPID TRANSIT 


One of the first railway trains in use in this country 
has stopped at a tavern near which the railway passes. 
A yellow stage-coach and various vehicles are assembled 
near the tavern front and in the stable yard, and the 
people gaze with interest on the locomotive. In the train 
itself a few passengers are seen seated as in the stage- 
coaches to which they are accustomed, and on the right 
of the railway stand a farmer, with his yoke of steers, 
and a little family group intent on the novel spectacle. 
Another contrast in transportation methods is found in 
the canal boat which is slowly moving along the water- 
way in the extreme right of the composition. 


Signed at the lower left, E. L. Henry, 97. 
Height, 16 inches; length, 33 inches. 


Owner, M. TANENBAUM. 


SIO Cay No. 107 


WORDSWORTH THOMPSON, N.A. 
AMERICAN 


hue. MM ba la 


A WAYSIDE INN, WESTCHESTER 


A party of British cavalry has halted at a wayside 
inn, after a gallop along a muddy road, and the 
horses are tethered to the veranda posts. The men are 
resting themselves after the ride and enjoying the hos- 
pitality of the hostelry. The low building is partly of 
brick and partly of stone, and hanging from a tree 
nearby is a sign bearing the legend, ‘* The White Swan 
Inn,” with the painted figure of a white swan. From the 
left foreground the narrow muddy road winds around 
to the right and then to the left, leading toward a vil- 


lage which is seen in the horizon. 


Signed at the lower right, WorpvswortH ‘THOMPSON. 
Height, 18% inches; length, 27 inches. 


Owner, M. TANENBAUM. 


"WN ‘NOSINOHT, HLUOMSCUO AA AG ‘uagsayojsayy “uuy apshoyy ‘LOL “ON 


No. 108 
A CO - 
HENRY P. SMITH jee 
AMERICAN 


Ut Vowrhes 


AFTER THE STORM 


Late in the afternoon a storm which has long been ra- 
ging ceases, and the sunlight breaks through the rapidly 
scattering clouds, markedly accentuating them here and 
there, and making strong contrasts of light and shade 
in the landscape. The foreground, which is in deep 
shadow, is a rough pasture with scattered bowlders and 
bushes, and here and there a sturdy tree. Across a 
wooded plain in the middle distance there is seen in the 
horizon a flat-topped hill, broken here and there by 
clumps of trees. 


Signed at the lower right, Henry P. Smiru. 
Height, 20 inches; length, 271, inches. 


Owner, M. TANENBAUM. 


27-S0 No. 109 


ALBERTO PASINI 
kre ITALIAN 
1826—1899 
THE PASHA’S ESCORT 


Tue highly decorated facade of a Moorish palace ex- 
tends across the picture, strongly illuminated by sun- 
light which casts a shadow from the broad cornice along 
the top of the composition, and throws an arched pas- | 
sageway into mysterious gloom. On the right a digni- 
tary who is just entering the palace has dismounted 
from a chestnut horse which is watched by two attend- 
ants, and on their right is a group of armed followers. 
On the left is a mounted official with a drawn sword. 


Signed at the lower right, A. Pastnt. 
Height, 271%, inches; width, 19, inches. 
Owner, M. TANENBAUM.  \ ¢ W. G 
a enc) APA 
E92 Px CAIN KA Carne HEE Sate fd 
Ootir—e+ QL Sx, Jor es 2Yfohoy<— 
[0 02-9 aAcexr ser M.S, Me KK 


No. 109. The Pasha’s Escort. By Atserto Pasrni 


No. 110 


JAN MONCHABLON /: Av 
FRENCH 


Contemporary 
LANDSCAPE Pi hoe 66 


Tuts is a view of a richly cultivated country where the 
farms are divided into small areas by shallow ditches 
and occasional fringes of bushes and small trees. In the 
distance, beyond pleasant grain fields, a rounded hill 
with long, sloping flank forms the horizon. High in the 
sky float a few tiny clouds and the landscape is lighted 
by a broad flood of sunlight radiating from the zenith. 


Signed at the lower right, Jan Moncuaston, 1887. 
Height, 21 inches; length, 28 inches. 


Owner, M. TANENBAUM. X 
MK, 7°97) —Crot word Dichetir— 
Sree (alan warms. frit bot 
SXKK- 
ee Ste MT 7S 7X 


No. 111 


oe 
THOMAS MORAN, N.A. 
AMERICAN 


ZA fp ye Ld ope 1837— 


IN THE GRAND CANAL 


Tus is a view of the Grand Canal from a point nearly 
opposite the Academy. On either side of the picture 
near the landings are groups of boats with colored 
sails and filled with people in gay costumes. On the 
right is a row of sumptuous facades, and on the left 
is the Campanile, rising above the domes of San Marco, 
while farther away are the Ducal Palace and the Riva 


in rapidly diminishing perspective. 


Signed at the lower left, ty ORAN, N.A., 1898. 
Height, 1914 inches; length, 29% inches. 


Owner, M. TANENBAUM. 


WN ‘NVUOJ, SVWOHT, AQ) ‘7DUWNDD punty aux UT “TIL ‘ON 


wer 


No. 112 


THOMAS MORAN, N.A. J Bay Nae 
AMERICAN 


WS Neury Heh lLbed, 


THE GRAND CANYON 
OF THE YELLOWSTONE 


Tue view of this remarkable gorge is taken from the 
west bank of the Yellowstone River, looking southward. 
On either side rise lofty crags fantastically colored by 
nature, and between them and far below rushes the 
narrow river from the foot of the falls, which are 
the prominent object in the middle distance. Beyond the 
falls and above them the eye is carried across a gently 
rolling country to the horizon, where lofty summits are 
faintly seen in the warm summer haze. 


Signed at the lower left, Hy ORAN, 1898. 


Height, 30 inches; width, 25 inches. 
Owner, M. TANENBAUM. 


LO ie No. 113 


FRITZ THAULOW 


a 
POS WnritefleZe& NORWEGIAN 


1847— 


THE BRIDGE, AUDENARDE 


A RIPPLING stream, extending across the foreground, 
winds away in a gentle curve to the right under a 
wooden bridge which spans the water, and leads to a 
pasageway between tall houses which line the river bank. 
Between the river and the houses on the left is a gar- 
den, with a red-roofed hovel and various shrubs and 
trees, surrounded by a wall. The group of houses and 
the river bank are reflected in the rippling water as well 
as the rift in the sky where the storm clouds break. 


Signed at the lower right, Frrrz Tuautow. 
Height, 211% inches; width, 18 inches. 
Owner, Pever A. SCHEMM. 


ie Cob fro mt Kee Jott Oe Ir f 


No. 113. The Bridge, Audenarde 


By Frirz THavitow 


No. 114 4.4 phate 
Lf Ad, pe 
RAIMUNDO DE MADRAZO 

SPANISH 


1841— P54 li/atlaeb . 


THE TRYST 


Tuis is the full-length figure of a young lady wearing 
an eighteenth century costume of tunic, bodice and 
skirt over a white petticoat, and a long black lace man- 
tle, which is draped over her head and falls to the 
ground. She leans against a tree which grows near a 
garden path, and half hides a note which she holds in 
her right hand. 


Signed at the lower right, R. Mavrazo. 
Height, 35 inches; width, 23 inches. 


Owner, SotomMoN MEHRBACH. 


i No. 115 


MARTIN RICO 


SPANISH 
SIE oth 1850— 


THE SALUTE, VENICE 


Tuts is a view of the Church of the Salute, seen from 
the upper story or roof of a building on the same side 
of the Grand Canal. The domes and turrets, above the 
roofs in the middle distance, rise. against a simple sky, 
forming the chief feature of the composition, and in the 
foreground is a pleasant garden with trees and flower- 
ing shrubs on the corner of a side canal where it joins” 
the famous waterway of Venice. Various gondolas are 

moored to the walls in the foreground, and here and 
there, in the shadow of the houses, the gondoliers are 
taking their ease. On the left, beyond the tall building 
surrounding the church, is seen the distant Riva, and 
on the right, in the horizon, the trees of the public 
garden are visible. 


Signed at the lower right, Rico. 
Height, 281% inches; width, 2114, inches. 


Owner, M. TANENBAUM. 


The Salute, Venice 


By Martin Rico 


No. 115. 


No. 116 Wy dl hE 


JULIUS ROBERT BEYSCHLAG 
GERMAN 


1838— Dee Ge) Ly pos 


THE NYMPH 


A cuassic maiden is seated on the shelf of a low ledge 
of rocks, which is overhung by trees and surrounded 
by rankly growing weeds and grass. Her hair is 
bound up by a narrow pink ribbon and her white 
tunic has fallen from her shoulders. Red and blue 
draperies, with a bow and a quiver of arrows, lie on the 
ground beside her. The maiden is in an attitude of 
attention and is thoughtfully gazing in the direction of 
a young Pan, who plays the pipes under a large tree 
in the left of the composition. Between the two figures 
is a view of the sea, and a small area of cloud-covered 
sky is seen between the overhanging branches of large 
trees. 


Signed at the lower left, R. Beyscuuae. 
Height, 24 inches; length, 31 inches. 


Owner, WILLIAM SALOMON. 


No. 117 


4 We O Cm JOSEF ISRAELS 
DUTCH 


A Goroze 1824— 


A NEIGHBORLY CALL 


GATHERED around a table in a rude Dutch interior are 
three peasants, two of them apparently calling on the 
third, who sits at the end of the table in his shirt sleeves 
with his apron on. Behind the group stands the huys- 
vrouw pouring beer from a jug into a steen, and on 
the right, in the background, is seen the glimmer of a 
kitchen fire built on the hearth. The group is lighted 
from a window on the left. 


Signed at the lower left, Josrr Israxts. 
Height, 23% inches; length, 28% inches. 
Owner, Peter A. SCHEMM. 
7 ° 


CT KX, 


stavusy aasoe Aq "709 AKysoqyswnN FP “LIT ‘ON 


No. 118 D6e- 


GEORGES MICHEL 
FRENCH 


ae HE Ublusae— 


THE GATHERING STORM 


THis is a wide view across a country broken here and 
there by frequent villages, coppices and low hills. A 
flash of sunlight strongly illuminates a passage across 
the middle distance, bringing into prominence a church 
with square towers surrounded by a number of houses, 
and an adjacent windmill which rises on a rocky emi- 
nence. The foreground is in shadow and a traveller 
on horseback, who has halted to talk with a peasant 
woman driving a cow, forms a prominent feature of the 
composition. The sky is covered with storm clouds sug- 
gesting frequent rapidly passing showers, and the light 
is concentrated in the upper left of the picture. 


Height, 22 inches; length, 30 inches. 


Owner, Peter A. SCHEMM. 


No. 119 


JG60e — ADOLF SCHREYER 
GERMAN 


ae SL. Witter 1828—1899 


THE RETREAT 


Aw Arab sheik, mounted on a white horse and holding 
a banner in his right hand, is urging his animal to a 
rapid pace over a rocky ground, looking backward as 
he goes. He is followed by a number of armed attend- 
ants, all of whom are galloping at full speed, and those 
nearest the sheik are anxiously watching behind them. 


Signed at the lower right, Av. SCHREYER. 
Height, 23 inches; length, 38 inches. 


Owner, Sotomon MEHRBACH. 


UARAUHOG Atoay AG 4091449 94. “GIL “ON 


GIRS aS SE al 


No. 120 
C. DE LORT LS MEE SEB 


FRENCH 


' 
1814—1894 
1BYt- 95 W? eZ ee 


GATE AND FOUNTAIN AT ROUEN 


Tuts is a study of the famous fountain and street cor- 
ner near the large clock on the archway in Rouen. A 
horseman has brought two animals to drink at the 
fountain, and is chaffing the bare-armed maidens who 
come there to draw water for household use. Under the 
archway two porters are carrying a sedan chair, and in 
the window of the sumptuously decorated house above 
the fountain is a richly dressed couple looking from the 
balcony on the scene below. 


Signed at the lower left, C. Dr Lort. 
Height, 35 inches; width, 251, inches. 


Owner, WILLIAM SALOMON. 


No. 121 


Goo 
HENRI HARPIGNIES 


Weck & FRENCH 


1819— 


SUMMER 


In the left foreground a huge tree with straggling 
branches and rounded masses of foliage is relieved 
against a blue sky with small drifting cumuli. On the 
right of the composition, on the shoulder of a low eleva- 
tion, stand two smaller trees which cast a shadow on a 
‘narrow swale which leads to the middle distance, where 
a lake shimmers in the sunlight, bordered on the far 
shore by a range of moderate-sized hills. 


Signed at the lower left, H./Harpicnies, 1898. 
Height, 311, inches; width, 25 inches. 


Owner, Peter A. ScHEMM. iad SKK 
G, Pavic Qn tt. OVE Jo° 
tS AC ce fe PE LepffadeK poty i 1072 


No. 121. Swmmer 


By Henri Harpicnies 


y 


i 


ecrea,**t, 
Tan 


No. 122 Us oe 


A. VON WIERUSZ KOWALSKI | 
POLISH 
1849— O. 7 - | 7, 


THE MORNING RIDE 


A youné man, mounted on a spirited bay horse, is ac- 
companying on her morning ride his ladylove, who 
ambles along upon her cream-colored cob. Two white 
greyhounds accompany them and they are followed at 
a respectful distance by a groom. Their way leads along 
a leaf-strewn road under great beeches in winter garb, 
and the sharp light of the autumn sun accentuates the 
figures and the landscape, forming strong contrasts of 
light and shade. The costumes are of the period of the 
late eighteenth century. 


Signed at the lower right, A. v. Wierusz Kowatskt. 
Height, 391, inches; width, 301% inches. 


Owner, WILLIAM SALOMON. 


No. 123 


Oo 
a ADOLF SCHREYER 


GERMAN 


KO : Cees 1828—1899 


THE RECONNAISSANCE 


A number of armed and mounted Arabs have just 
emerged from the shelter of a ridge of rough hills and 
are watching for signs of the enemy in the plain be- 
yond. The three foremost riders are mounted on iron- 
gray horses, and the middle one is evidently a sheik, 
for he is dressed in silken garments and wears jewelled 
weapons in his belt. To the left of the group, which 18 
relieved against a distant rough hillside, is a view across 
a broken rolling country, and in the horizon a tiny 
cloud of smoke gleams in the sunlight. 


Signed at the lower right, Av. SCHREYER. 
Height, 221% inches; length, 37 inches. 
Owner, Peter A. SCHEMM. 


ae 


One’? & 


UTATUHOG wtody Ag ‘aouvsswuuory ay, “SSL “ON 


No. 124 2640 — 
SCATTERED over a large palette are various figures of 
maidens, children jand animals, with a profusion of 
flowers and tropical plants, and here and there a glimpse 
of a landscape and suggestions of allegorical figures. 
The central figure is a young lady rowing a boat dec- 
orated with garlands of flowers and steered by a young 
man wearing a striped jersey and red cap. The prom- 
inent features in the scheme of the decorations are re- 


productions of two photographs mounted on cards and 
fastened to the palette by thumb tacks. 


J. BERNARD 


THE ARTIST’S DREAM 


Signed at the lower right, J. Bernarp. 
Height, 2714, inches; length, 43 inches. 


Owner, Peter A. SCHEMM. 


No. 125 
J0oe — 


PAUL JEAN CLAYS 
BELGIAN 


A Gore 1819—1900 


NEAR AMSTERDAM 


A LARGE barque and several Dutch luggers are grouped 
together on the right of the composition and their tow- 
ering masts and idly hanging sails are relieved against 
a mass of thin gray clouds which nearly cover the sky. — 
To the left of the group of vessels is a vista down a 
long reach thronged with craft of various sorts, and 
on the right is a suggestion of the shore with various 


figures grouped near a fishing boat. 


Signed at the lower right, P. J. Crays. 
Height, 271%, inches; length, 39% inches. 


Owner, Peter A. SCHEMM. 


SAVIQ Nvae Tavg 4q ‘“wopsaysmp IDIN “GBI ON 


PROFESSOR WILHELM KRAY 


GERMAN 
AF? JAZ soo 


Contemporary 


THE BAY OF NAPLES 


In the foreground is a large rowboat with seven young 
Neapolitan maidens who are apparently enjoying a 
water excursion, for they carry musical instruments 
and bouquets and are dressed in festive attire. One of 
the girls, standing up in the boat, is singing a song, 
while the rowers pause to listen to her, and the other 
girls apparently join in the refrain. Across the broad 
expanse of the Bay of Naples is seen a rocky mountain 
ridge in the glow of early sunset. 


Signed at the lower right, W. Kray. 
Height, 28 inches; length, 44 inches. 


Owner, WILLIAM SALOMON. 


No. 127 


/ JULIEN DUPRE 
FRENCH 
MN Greed. 1812—1889 
THE VALLEY OF THE DURDENT 


In a rich pasture which extends across the foreground 
is a herd of spotted cattle scattered over the grass. In 
the foreground on the left a milkmaid trudges along, 
bearing two large pails hung from a strap over her 
shoulders. In the distance, beyond an extensive plain, is a 
range of high, wooded hills. The sky is covered with 
turbulent storm clouds through which the sun breaks, 
striking the landscape here and there with broad patches 
of light. 


Signed at the lower left, JuttreNn Dupre. 
Height, 42 inches; length, 58 invhes. 
Owner, Peter A. SCHEMM. 


Exposition Universelle, Paris, 1900, No. 709. 
2 Pa ee 


gudaq Nartae <q ‘quaping ayy fo hayvy ay, “LBL “ON 


= = Hers 
eT ic tan ec etinh net 


No. 128 pate, 


WILLIAM ADOLPHE BOUGUEREAU 
FRENCH 


1825—1905 Cay ee 


THE GARDENER’S DAUGHTER 


Tuis is the full-length life-size figure of a dark-haired 
young maiden, bare footed and bare armed, dressed in 
a low bodice over a white chemise and a deep mauve 
skirt over a blue petticoat. She holds a bunch of roses 
with both hands and inclines her head to enjoy the per- 
fume from a white rose. Behind her is a luxuriously 
growing garden, with a glimpse of summer sky in the 
upper right and spots of sunlight on the path below. 


Signed at the lower left, W. Boucurrrau, 1895. 
Height, 62 inches; width, 36 inches. 


Owner, Sotomon MEuHRBACH. 


(See Frontispiece ) 


No. 129 
S LLOO : 
JOSEF ISRAELS 
DUTCH 


ANGrr20- ee 


WATCHING AND WAITING 


In the foreground, seated on a small dune partly cov- 
ered by coarsely growing grass, is a Dutch peasant 
girl, knitting while she watches the distant sea, evidently 
expecting the return of a fishing craft. In the distance 
two boats toss on the breakers as they roll upon the 
‘shallow beach, and beyond them is the placid expanse 
of the sea stretching away to an unbroken horizon. 
The sky is covered with a veil of clouds, with here and 
there a luminous spot. 


Signed at the lower left, Josrr Israets. 
Height, 37 inches; length, 52 inches. 


Owner, Peter A. SCHEMM. 


Videow [rege 42 KKK 


By Josrer IsraEs 


Watching and Waiting. 


No. 129. 


No. 1380 VE, OO 


THOMAS MORAN, N.A. 
AMERICAN 


1837— VO a Aged 


THE TETON RANGE 


In the foreground a rushing mountain stream tumbles 
into a lake surrounded by rocky cliffs and roughly 
wooded slopes. In the distance rises an immense range of 
rocky peaks, with extensive snow fields and broad gla- 
ciers. The sun is low in the heavens and casts long shad- 
ows across the landscape, strongly uluminating here 
and there the rocks and trees, and bringing the great 
mountain range into vivid contrast against the simple 


sky beyond. 


Signed at the lower right, froran, 1897. 
Height, 30 inches; length, 45 inches. 


Owner, M. TanENBAUM. 


[4G O— No. 131 


DAVID TENIERS THE YOUNGER 
DUTCH 


MN Gp ree 1610—1690 


THE VILLAGE KIRMESS 


A LARGE company of peasants is assembled in the yard 
of a roadside public house. In the foreground, on the 
left, a number of old people are seated at a small table 
drinking white wine out of tall glasses. In the middle 
of the composition two boor couples are dancing to the 
tune of a violin and bagpipes, and behind them, near 
the inn, is a large party feasting at a long table. The 
roadway in front of the hostelry winds away between 
lofty trees to a distant church in the horizon. 


Height, 29 inches; length, 47 inches. 


Owner, Peter A. ScHEMM. 


UMONDOX AHL SUMINGT, Glavqg Ag ‘ssawuy asvojpr4y 24, “LEL ‘ON 


No. 13 
No 2 SLOe 


JOSE DOMINGO 
SPANISH 
1843— MN Grete 


Iy the courtyard of a hostelry a number of cavaliers 
are seated at a table underneath a vine-covered pergola 
roofed with red tiles, one of them, astride of a bench, 


THE LOVE SONG 


playing upon a large lute and singing a love ditty, 
meanwhile casting amorous glances at a serving maid 
who stands nearby. In the foreground various other 
figures are drinking and feasting, and on the pavement 
near the group lies a dead fawn. Scattered around in 
some confusion are various articles of domestic use. 


Signed at the lower right, J. Dominco, Paris, 1896. 
Height, 40 inches; length, 41 inches. 


Owner, PETER A. SCHEMM. 


Coot. frre. OKs KKK 


MK F¢¢ ¥ (“4 a 
es ila Sete SL fperen - 
re Vac Cent Veet Col pr ra 


Ab COD No. 133 


EUGENE JOSEPH VERBOECKHOVEN 
BELGIAN 


AG r1 24 17991881 


THE SHEEPCOTE INTERIOR 


A ¥FEw sheep, with lambs and a large goat, are resting 
in a rude thatched interior, some of them lying on the 
straw-littered floor, where a few fowl scratch and search 
for grains of wheat. A large opening in the wall lets 
in a flood of sunshine, which falls upon the sheep, and, 
at the same time, frames in a pleasant landscape with 
a quiet river, windmills and shepherds with their flocks. 


Signed on the back, EUGENE VERBOECKHOVEN, 1872. 
Height, 34 inches; length, 49 inches. 


Owner, Peter A, ScHEMM. 


No. 182. The Love Song 


By Jost Domrinco 


din 


i 
s 


NTAOHMOTOMUAA HANsope ANAOAY AG ‘Lo1lazuy aqzoodaayy ay, “GEL ‘ON 


No. 1384 
Oe ON 


PROFESSOR WILHELM KRAY 
GERMAN ’ 
Mo Clas JOEY py aon 
Contemporary 
fo1cHe AND THE BUTTERFLY 


SEATED on a grassy bank a maiden, holding in her right 
hand a bunch of flowers, which rests on a diaphanous 
mantle thrown across her lap, is watching a butterfly 
which has just lighted upon her left foot. The sunlight 
falls upon the figure from above and behind, touching 
the fair hair, the sloping shoulders, the right forearm, 
the right hip and the knees, and throwing the rest of 
the figure into luminous shadow. In the distance lofty 
mountains rise nearly to the top of the picture, show- 
ing only a narrow strip of cloudy sky beyond. 


Signed at the lower right, W. Kray. 
Height, 44 inches; width, 29 inches. 


Owner, Peter A. SCHEMM. 


SSO yes No. 135 


HENDRIK WILLEM MESDAG 
DUTCH 


MG ae 1831— 


WINTER AT SCHEVENINGEN 


Drawn up on the snow-covered beach of the famous 
fishing village of Scheveningen is a large number of fish- 
ing boats, many of them with hoisted sails. Here and 
there parties of fisher folk stand about in the snow, and 
in the foreground are two wagons laden with nets. On 
the left of the scene, between the boats drawn up at the 
water’s edge, is the broad expanse of the North Sea, 
with a few sails showing on the ‘horizon. Across the sky 
drift luminous scattered cloud forms, and here :and 


there seagulls sail high in the air. 


Signed at the lower right, H. W. Mespae, 1899. 
Height, 55 inches; length, 70 inches. 


Owner, Peter A. SCHEMM. 


ee 


No. 134. Psyche and the Butterfly 


By Proressor WitHetm Kray 


OVGSa] WATTIAA MINGNAY, AG ‘waduuanaYyog 4D sajUWA, “GET ‘ON 


an te 20 


© ce nndeerelsior st0° 


a 


bushc-* . eh 


No. 136 


RAIMUNDO DE MADRAZO 


TE 
SPANISH 


THE MORNING PRAYER 


A youne girl in late eighteenth century costume, with 
a white lace cap and blue bodice trimmed with salmon- 
pink ribbons, a short, loose silk petticoat, flesh-colored 
stockings, and satin slippers of the same color, is _ 
perched upon an easy chair, with one foot under her, 
extending her clasped hands upon one of the arms of 
the chair, over which a blue mantle has been thrown, 
and bows her head in the attitude of prayer. The figure 
is of the size of life and is in a strong effect of light 
relieved against a background of a graded tone of 
brown. 


Signed at the lower left, R. Maprazo. 


Height, 73 inches; width, 40 inches. 
Owner, WILLIAM SALOMON. 


No. 137 


LOGE JULES BRETON 
f i aed 
FRENCH 


Lein 
THE BURNING RICK 


A DISASTER not uncommon in farming regions is occur- 
ring in a rickyard near a village in France. In the fore- 
ground a large wheat rick is already in flames, and a 
large number of excited peasants are busy, some of 
them trying to extinguish the fire, others in tearing the _ 
shocks from the rick. Numbers of men bring water in 
tubs and barrels, and even the children and women lend 
active assistance. From the distant village a large num- 
ber of peasants hurry toward the scene, and a few of 
them are already engaged in trying to protect a second 
rick from the flames by tearing it down and covering 
it up. 


Signed at the lower right, Jutes Breton. 
Height, 55%, inches; length, 82% inches. 


Owner, M. TANENBAUM. 
AI(30 Bete 7 SX XK. MuesK 


‘So PR Overy ale (Gol P72 
AMERICAN ART ASSOCIATION, 
MANAGERS. 


THOMAS E. KIRBY, 


AUCTIONEER. 


By Juxes Breton 


The Burning Rick. 


Now 137; 


ARTISTS REPRESENTED 
AND THEIR WORKS 


ARTISTS REPRESENTED 
THEIR WORKS 


ad 


ANDREOTTI, F., 


The Cabaret 
The Page 


Beek: Wiis H:, N.A., 
“Who Are You? ” 


BECKER, Cart L. F., 
A Cup of Tea 


BERAUD, Jean, 


On the Boulevards 


BERNARD, J., 
The Artist’s Dream 


BERNE-BELLECOUR, E., 
Off Duty 
Meditation 
Halt by the Wayside 
Planning 
Off Duty 


AND 


CATALOGUE 
NUMBERS 


44: 
84 


101 


124 


CATALOGUE 
NUMBERS 


BERTZIK, A., 
Head 91 


BEYSCHLAG, J. R., 
The Nymph 116 


BIERSTADT, Ausert, N.A., 
Western Kansas in 1860 56 


BOUGUEREAU, Witiram ApoiprHe 
The Gardener’s Daughter | 128 


BRAND’, Pror. Joser, 
Polish Soldiers Capturing a Turk | 67 


BRETON, Jutes, 
The Burning Rick , 137 


BRUNIN, Leon, 
Dividing the Spoils 68 


CAZIN, Jean CHARLES, 


Old Ruins 34 
The Departure of Night 88 
The Garden 97 


GIZA Ys.) Atal A Ne 
The River Front, Antwerp | AT 
Near Amsterdam 125 


CATALOGUE 
NUMBERS 


COLLAERT, Mute. Maris, 
The Barnyard | 45 


COROT, J. B. C., 
The Glade | 99 


CONSTANT, Bensamin, 
On the Housetops, Algiers 59 


CONTI, Trro, 
The Bridal Pair 61 


DE BLAAS, EvcEns, 
Brunette Head 4 
Blond Head 


ct 


DECAMPS, ALexanpre GABRIEL, 
Fortune-teller in the Camp 33 


DE HOOG, Bernarp, 


A Humble Home 62 

Preparing the Meal 64 
PreLORT, C., 

Gate and Fountain at Rouen , 120 


DELPY, H. C., 
Moonlight 14 


DELPY ys He J:; 
Banks of the Oise 
The River Marne 


DIETERLE, Marte, 
Cattle 


DOMINGO, José, 
The Love Song 


DUPRE, Ju tien, 
The Valley of the Durdent 


EDE, FReEpeEric, 
Springtime on the River Dampierre 
EMILE, Pror. Wituiam, 


The Stirrup Cup 


ERNST, Rvupotr, 
The Sentinels 


FLAMENG, Francots, 


Flirtation 


GRISON, Jutes ApoLpHeE, 
The New Coat 


HARPIGNIES, Henri, 


Summer 


CATALOGUE 
NUMBERS 


36 
98 - 


80) 


132 


127 


41 


30 


58 


al! 


100 


121 


HENNER, Jean Jaceaues 
The Weeping Magdalen 
Head 
The Dreamer 


HENRY, E. L., N.A., 


News of the Nomination 


CATALOGUE 
NUMBERS 


29 


General Burgoyne’s March down the Hudson 87 


The Childhood of Rapid Transit 


HORENBANT, J., 
A Holland Home Interior 


ISRAELS, Joser, 


A Neighborly Call 
Watching and Waiting 


JACQUE, Cuartes Emite, 


The Flock 
Sheep—Near Fontainebleau 


JAMES, Frepericx, 
Franklin and General Braddock 


JAPY, L., 
Misty Morning on the Oise 


KNIGHT, Dantet Riveway, 
The Fisher Girl 


106 


66 


117 
129 


95 
103 


43 


42 


93 


KOWALSKI, A. von WieErwsz, 
The Morning Ride 


KRAY, Pror. W., 
The Bay of Naples 
Psyche and the Butterfly 


LAMBERT, Louis Evcene, 
In Mischief 


LAUGEE, Gerorces, 


Coming through the Rye | 


LAWRENCE, Sir Tuomas, R.A., 
Portrait of Captain Thomas Drake 


LLANCES, Josk, 
A Good Time 


LOIR, Lote, 
On the Marne at Creteil 


LUMINAIS, E. V., 


The Invasion of Italy by the Gauls 


MADRAZO, R. pr, 


The Tryst 
The Morning Prayer 


CATALOGUE 
NUMBERS 


122 


126 


40 


39 


19 


48 


114 
136 


MASSANI, P., : 
No Fool Like an Old Fool 


MATHES, Nicotas, 
Christmas Eve 


MAX, GasrietL, 
A Christian Martyr in the Catacombs 


MERLE, Hucves, 


A Brittany Interior 


MESDAG, H. W., 


Winter at Scheveningen 


MEYERHEIM, Wityewm, 
Old City on the Rhine 


MEYER VON BREMEN, 
The Pets 


MICHEL, Geroreces, 


From Montmartre 


The Gathering Storm 


MONCHABLON, Jan, 
Bords de la Saéne, Lirencourt 


Landscape 


CATALOGUE 
NUMBERS 


10 


TT 


63 


18 


16 
118 


Li 
110 


CATALOGUE 
NUMBERS 


MORAN, ‘Tuomas, N.A., 


Entrance to the Grand Canal 37 
Venice from the Giudecca 91 
In the Grand Canal 111 
The Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone 112 
The Teton Range 130 


MUNKACSY, Minaty pe 
After the Dessert 58 


OCHTMAN, Leonarp, N.A., 
Moonlight | 49 


PASINI, Axserro, 


Market Place—Constantinople 18 
The Sultan’s Escort | 35 
Market Scene—Constantinople 76 
Moorish Market Place 79 


The Pasha’s Escort 109 


PERBOYRESR. Ee i 
The Review 15 


RICO, Martin, 
The Salute, Venice 115 


ROMNEY, Geores, 
Portrait of Lord Devon . 38 


CATALOGUE 
NUMBERS 


RONNER, Henrierta, 


While Friends Quarrel the Enemy Secures the 
Prize 86 


ROSELAND, Harry, 
The Parson 3 


ROUSSEAU, THroporE, 


Landscape 81 


SANCHEZ-PERRIER, E., 


Landscape 9 
Landscape 83 


SCHREYER, Avotr, 


The Scout es | 32 
Wallachian Peasant and Horses 50 
The Retreat 119 
The Reconnaissance | 123 


SHIFERT, A., 
Girl’s Head 1 


SMITH, Henry P., 
The Mountain Pool Q7 
After the Storm 108 


STEVENS, Aurrep, 


The Packet, Tréport 22 
The Sailboat, Tréport 82 


STREITT, Franz, 
The Accident 


STRUTZEL, Orro, 
The Chat by the Wayside 


TAIT, Arrnuur F., N.A., 


Friends 

Maternal Anxiety 
Early Birds 
Sheep and Dog 


TENIERS, Davin, Tur Youncer, 
The Village Kirmess 


THAULOW, Frirz, 
- The Bridge, Audenarde 


THOMPSON, Worpsworth, N.A., 
A Wayside Inn, Westchester 


TYLER, James G., 


Overdue 


VALKENBURG, HeEnprikx, 
Mealtime 


VAUTIER, M. L. B., 
The Wedding Feast 


CATALOGU 
NUMBERS 


70 


31 


131 


113 


107 


54 


46 


102 


CATALOGUE 
NUMBERS 


VERBOECKHOVEN, Eucetne Josepn, 


At Pasture 3 8 
Sheep and Fowl 55 
The Sheepcote Interior 133 


VERNET, orice: 


Austrian Prisoners Forced to Work 105 


VIBERT, Jenan GEORGES, 


Gulliver and the Lilliputians 60 
The Young Cardinal 73 
The Palace Courtyard 92 
The Gardener’s Bouquet 94 


VON KAMEKE, Pror. Orro, 
The Jungfrau | 65 


WORMS, Jues, 


Engaging the Cab 23 
Forbidden Fruit 85 
The Departure for the Hunt 90 
Sweet Proposals 96 


ZIEM, Feéuix, 
On the Bosphorus 26 
Morning on the Lagoon, Venice 52 


‘ Fis Pi y mat 
- en ee oe, 
Americ: ‘ ‘- 7 


Charles Cazin’\O1d Ruins” at 
000-the To. “Price, of 
P aeile’ Evening. . 


* 


AT $1,390 


‘rican Pain 2's Work Among the Ten 
pf) Best Selling Canvases | auction | 
in Mendelssohn ‘Fal. - : 


ah / 
ee, z yore 
DS Se +s (aman 


mm, Moses Tanen- | 


Biddle and to the estate’ 


: es ee 
Pi wots ag ra mahal Mean 


se These were ‘The 
Sut," which was bought by Mr. A. Wolt,. 
4 ord. & £ . m y 2.34 
= Ww Jlachian. (Peasant and > Horses, 
Q Messrs. artis Tootke and Sons ob- 
gether there were ten pictures that 
i for ache $1,000 ana it is worth noting 
/although the Jate Albert Bierstadt 
onged to. the much derided, so-called 
ison rer School,’ his ‘‘Western 
sas in 1860,”" was one of ‘these. Oddly 
gh it Wwas-bought by Mr..C. I. Hudson. 
| The favored ten last night, together with 
the names of the buyers and prices, 
7 — » * 4 é ? ‘ 


were: 


Ser The Bey te SOUWOHy AKERE. 83,000 
eae Teeth & Bee Shay «8.100 
ab ai oie ia ia tae 
Bie, ore ances in’ 1860, 4300 
ee ee rg 

ABlieiiela feo siat Wate g Sods s 1,225 


eon... “gpg URE 
> ea the Lilliputians;"? Mr, 1,026 


ety 3 i ote 


tte teow 
a 


Brandt, ‘Polish Soldiers Capturing a Turk!" 
eet, Bonen & I ET dae? MW ouch Gia ak 1,025 
5 ‘The remainder of the collection will be 


| 
1 
; 
sl 


y 
| 
| 
| 


{ 


Schreyer’s “The Retreat’? Brings the 
| Top Price, $5,600, at Last ) 


s gaf . Night’s Sale. 

a “yf pee! @ 
1.7 Ucrwbyp 3.3 UA, | 
BIDS | JUMP “ON | ISRAELS 
His “Watching and Waiting,” Run Up tol 

$5,400, Divides Second Honors 

with Another Schreyer. 

: @ ‘ 
The second and concluding evening of} 
the Sale of paintings owned by Severalj 
Pollectors at Mendelssohn Hall last night, | 
and conducted by Mr. Thomas BR. Kirby, 
bf the American Art Association, sixty- 
four canvases brought a total of $74, 950, 
| With Thursday night’s receipts this made] 
BR grand: total, in round humbers, of}; 
£110,000 for the entire sale, . 
| Dhe Schreyers On last night’s list were 
tore important’ canvases, This artist's} 
"Retreat. was bought by Mr, GC: I. Huq.! 
Son at the top price of the evening, $5,606: 
While his bought by | 


3 f 


Se 


“Reconnaissance,” 
Nor, HO; Seixas, Gividea second honors!) 
with Josef Israels? “Watching ana Wait-| 
{ne mote Soing at $5,400. | 
) Israels’ canvas Was the subject of the 
Most spirited bidding of the entire sale, It 
Went from $2,100. to $3,100 at a bound ana] 
yuiekly reached the Price at which it] 
Was sold to. an anonymous buyer. He also! 
Potained Israeig’ x Neighborly Ga” at 
»4,700, Downin's os “Love Song’ a’ $15,600, ‘the t 
younger Tenierg’ “Village Kirmess’ at} 
b1,400 and Verboeckhoven 8 “Sneepcote Tne} 
terior’? at $1,000, 
Pictures that brought $1,000 and over, || 
Thomas Moran's “Teton ‘Range’ giving) 
RMericn a representation among the *‘begt 
bellers,”. ag Bierstadt haq done the night 
Jvefore, were: 
Schreyor, “The Retreat;’’ C, 7, Hudson, .. .$5,600 
pehreyer, ‘The Reconnaissance:”’ 0 


bE ais Aa, ee (Sy aan cbs 5 400 
[sraels, * 


pr se SRC ace ANC RM 8h al 5,4 
psraeis, 64: Neighborly Call,’ Anonymous... 4,700 
Harpignies, “Sommer: kK : is 3.00) 

ougmereanu,  ‘#Phe Gardener's Day pier;”’ , 

Ietix Esmanryeniy ty yc Ge aepe  c oR oa 3 
Morse. “Ihe Ginde-i Kroedler & G9.) 22°°1" 2,600 
Facque, Sheep—Niear Fontainebleau; An- 

COON RECON e S uke vn, eee Pa a ahs 2,500 | 
Pasni, "De Pasha’s Escort:’? Kroediers& 

OS ego) Meee a eat wae 5 ATR gl +4 ey OO 
eis a “The Departure of Night;?* Knoed=, ou | 
I SET Os AOI 62 Tene ea eee Sat 
Clays, ‘‘Near Amsterdam ;'’ Gross}. 112.7.* 2,00 
Rien, “The Salute, Venice>’? J. B Cobb... 1,656 
Ienuer, Dine Dreamers” Gross. cs)” 1,850; 
Gazin, “The Garden ;’? FOAL Dudley on, ... 170 | 


‘Phe Love Song;’’? Anonymous, 1,500 | 
enters, Tipe Village IXirmuess ;’’ Anon meus 1,400) | 


ta eG 


lartists 
brought less than on the first night. 


‘under the curious impression that it was 
mis **Wallachian Peasant and Horses,’’ al- 


——— Mireianioi = Lenaseapen” a ee MAROC Vs Te 
Dieterle, Catth SERB HNES 4 beh phis... 3: 1,029 
Nroran,. “ihe Teton Raise Geer Beret. . 4,000 
Verboockhoyen, \ aie Ntote Interior;’’ — 

b AMOMY MOUS. ee pte seh alegre cain tine se 1,060 


Breton The Buarwhe. Riek or Felix Isiman a, “000 | 


t Owing to certain disputed bids and to a 
mistake in’ the identity of one of the 
Scehreyers sold, on Thursday night, his 
mescout’ and several paintings by other 
were..resold. Jast night. They’ 


‘The: Scout,’: which | had gone for $2,450 


though it. was clearly an Arab: subject, 
went on the:resale for only $1,750, a loss of 
Bee : shel ate tas wi wet 


hal stena A Madea bails 


er PRR P| Fe mp eae ES re 


TREASURES OF SIX 
ART LOVERS ON SALE 


Thomas E, Kirby: Begins Big 
Auction, at Mendels- 
fee ee esonn- Halli 


Thomas EH. Kirby began last evening at 
Medlessohn Hall bis sale by auction of the | 
collections of paintings formed by six art. 
lovers of varied interests. Sixty-elght num- 
bers of the catalogue brought $30,159, as | 
| follows: 

1—“‘Girl’s eee, Si Saad Wi: ee Nor- 


| 
den. er e@er eevee eoereevesees e@enererevreereree ata 

| gre riends,” ‘ ‘Lait; ul Finlay SR eae: ; 95 
| 3—' ae Parson,” "Roseland ; F, Loser « orf 
aT ROE ae we wee ecw BOSC OCH ee er aereene . OF 
4" Br anette,” "Blaas; SE gets 120 | 
5—“‘Blond,”’ Blaas; I. T. Bis Re Mor 125 
G— aa Bh es Beme-Bellecour; J y : i 
Pa ee ee ee eae ee ‘ 50 | 

G—"In "Mischict, x “Lembert; i, rel Rosen- 
AARIRL OT Nur CONG oellate lately Oca Sioc4 pipiens. woe. ssi ecmnd 315! 
s— cana Pasties “"Werbdeckhoven:; FF. L So H 
ee eerste Steere eer eesese restos es ek | 

| 9—*' iabica pe ‘Sanchez- Pees BoA, 
/ BRN Yuk ate sanay Wt eal wear a anghteatwisiarlaty s c.'s' shee 500) 
}10—No Fool Like “Old ool,” " Massani; | 
G. HB, Mitchell... s.. es: Wate\ietagre 80) 

11— “Constantinople,” Pasini; B. Wolf: ‘ 950) 
12— eet fe Beetle Tait; Mrs. *K. 170] 
eben eee et en err e ces 70 | 

13" Mediation," * Berne- Bellector : 5: ee Of 
f Rosenb auUM ++. Nuh ates 525 
et Sah ‘Moonlight,” Delphy; ‘6. Be Wurd..... nied 4a | 
jlo ‘Reyiew,’”’ Perboyre; J. C, Carlton... . 175 | 
16—‘‘From ‘Montmartre,’ Michel; Max E, - 
| MMT CLLGT OF Asin wim Wad aie inl tea eb eps) ates ‘ole 300 | 
17—‘‘Bords. de la ‘Saone,”” Monchablon; 500 | 
Is ean Meyer yon Bremen; J. ©. Carl- Aol 
191A ‘Good Time,” Liances; AY ice “Wig- 4s\ 
RELY EER gaat taoulalie ai atan Bhs 50) 

20—"W ie Ate You?” “Beard: M.  Siras- saan 
o1-—“Head ** Bertzik; J. G. Watson, ‘agent. 175.) 
22—' Packet Treport,’’ Stevens; Bore 150 | 
nite the- Cab,’ Worms; A. - | 

34 On the Boulevards,” Beraud; G. H. B. ! 
INSICCIOD) 3355 is aces chic uses a aec Nii a sieene 490 | 
25-—‘‘Martyr. in Catscanine. Max; Shae | 
A, Scheiren ae Cray 596 | 
28—1/Bosph orus,’ Ziem ; Springer... lees - 610 
——“Mountain Pool,” Sm tht: Mitchell. . 169. 


38" Halt by. the Wayside,’ Berne-Belle- 
cour; William Haig acto 3ibine Seavie Md so A tO 
29—"'News of Nomination,’’ Henry; " Doeser 


Creu ee PEDO eat ley Ss on inky A el eer aN 815 
s0—‘ (Gtirrup ‘Gun, * Pomiles Gari Gluckmann | 
81—‘‘Chat by the Wayside,” ae: M. 

Rodie Be saen ecu aaeee ec veaes ; 170) 
39.—"'Seout, » Schreyer: Ro AMEE ea ot 2,450) 
33—\' Fortune-Teller,’ ‘Decamps; Chace Ay 

Schieren .:. she 325) 
34——‘Old Ruins,’ *"Gazin: HH. Johnson agent 3,000) 


2h—‘Snitan’s Escort.” Pasini: C, aie son 


| 
41 'Sprir 
teeta n° 
43— Coe and 
44—‘Gabaret,’? An fates 
45—‘‘ Barnyard,” 


ery. 

a Note Valke 
47—‘‘River Front,” cl 
‘ ‘Invasion by Gat 
—‘ Moonlight,” 
50—“Peasant and 
& SOnS sss tidieee 
5i—‘‘On Marne at © 
Loren hs ea: 4” Ziem: 


ov ee 


e 
an a ‘Sheep. 
hee 5 ce: 


67—“‘Chr Spriatmas “Eve,”’ 
Kamm. ..+-+ ++. 
oe ee Dessert, 


BN. eee c eee ve 


de 
po —"'Hous £0] ‘Algiers,’” 
| eNGrh ee 


a Gr OSS. ces eeserere 
61—“‘ Bridal Pair,’” Ce 5 
62—"‘H umble Home,”’ 


Cys eae 


68—‘'Old ee es on 


bay . 
i: 64—" Pre eee Tne” Meal,” 
| Sparing’ the 


Cre ae 
5 —"The Jungfrau,” von Kameke HI, Ae 


paverepereinr very 0) ‘, 


| 66—""Hon ant Home Interior,’ 


Clas riten . Pree ee rd . ies 3 ‘ ait 
67—“‘Polish Be ae ae Turk 52 


Josef gers otek 
gai aing enon : * Dugro 


dgpdance was large and n 


comune 


rami tae ed 


ot very ardent. 
“‘Whe'sale is to pe concluded this evenin 


als, $11 10 000. 


‘Thomas | be Kirby concluded last - evening 
his sale by auction at Mendelssohn Hall of 
é tions: ‘of paintings formed. by . six 
-s, ‘Sixty-nine numbers of the cata- 


tiie ‘brought $74,950. This sum, added to 
that’ _ Thursday evening's sale, makes 


| $110,00 ie the total amount of the cata- 
| logue. "Details of last iis patdey sale are 
las follows: 


No. “Title. Painter, Buyer. > > “Price, 


69—" aly Birds:” Tait; F, Loeser. \ $80 | 


Accident; By eter be Min) ek 2a, 110 
irta. ameng; l, A. Lanthier. 150 
en Berne-Be! llecour; 5 RE 


Danih OO REE 310 

ey 6k oO F. Loeser. 375 
hee Cay ae Williams. 1,325 
OS a ERE Sees aaa 0 
16 “Gons a eon > Patini: W. H. Smith 970 
: pats it OT, “DATO. - 2.2 es nee 8 TH 
: if oe ey pe Borne elec ou Fay ache 325 


ket; Pasini; A. ‘Tooth 
go——‘«(sattle:” 2 Dietele; R. H. Voorbies.. . 1,025 


to1—“enp 0 of Teh > Becker; -Mrs. ze Ram- ; 


Ce a er ee ey 


eC ee 


103 sheep.” Jacque; A. ‘er ae streeeaens 
104-—'‘Dreamer,’’ Henner: , Gtgss Patna Ge Fs 
105—““ Austrian. Prisoners.” Vernet; P. A. 


Ce ee ry 


Th 
| 106-—“Rarid @ransit? * ‘Wenry; C, Klac ree 


1OT—-‘‘Wavside Inn, S Thompson eae ar} 2) 
108—*‘ After : ‘Storm,”’ Smith. ional bt a panting 
109—*‘ Pasha’ g Escort, Paging: tote 


110—‘‘Landscape,’” Monchablon: J. B. Cobb. 
111—“‘Grand Canal;’’ es VC, piss Hudson. 


1+2—‘‘Grand Canyon,” MOPaM oie ie os oie aes 
1183—‘‘Bridge, Audenarde,’ eT ailow : G.. H. 
‘ itchell Fag ats A A es Pe RR ELS} 
j14—“*The Tryst,’’ ‘Madrazo; ae 1G: "Watson. 
115— Neth Rico: J. B..Cobb..... 
116-—“N Bey Fy A DA. ° Freedman .. 
{17_‘Neigt oe Call, a aelao... 


amie 7 et Stone, 8 Nihal: Mrs. R. 


Ce ee ee See ee 


120—“Gate and Fountain. eo I ENE 
ADMERINGE (1. Aictelsrisctalemie® By ale oni a eee ea 

121— ieaeer. a” Harpignies. ei ets ae Weer 

122—*‘ ‘Morning me Henan: So cGe 


Bayno ‘ Se ae 
joe. rp easnoalaaanee: | “Schreyer; ah: ae 0. 


| , 1,02 Seixas .... Si Paes Morin era eee a 

ioe te : Eaeen: W..W. Fuller. dt) |124—‘Artist’s Dream,”’ Bernard. ....0. Sate te 
} i “dyandscane ers v.11. 1501125—“Near Amsterdam,” Clays; Gross... 
| 83. .“Landscape ;” “Sancher-Peivier; J. B. : ‘gouty of Naples,’ Kray; Mrs... R 

0 ren Pee sae AMSAY ak see iS Cash Gee eye 
Mga: “rhe Paty. Andreotti: * Tanthier. i 1t0 1127—“Valley of Durdent,”’ Dupre; Gross. 
| 2 roebi idden a it:’? Wo as Rene i ary 400 | 128—“‘Gardener’s. Daughter,” BoneuerenY 

’ ee Friends Quarrel;’? Ronner..... 215 Felix Tsmams soto er eieg cleats see oe 
$7—‘‘Burgoyne’s March;”’ ‘Henry: FB. Loeser | 360) 129—<‘‘Watching and Waiting,” Teraels. aitie 
r: “So—sheer of Night; Oazin. 707) 2,000 1180—‘*Teton Range,’’ Moran. 6 Cet ciams 
i ‘Sheep and Dog; Tait; Mrs, R. Ram- 131—‘‘Village Kirmess,”’ Teniers, Cpa aerk ‘ 

pT EG Re ee sete 300 }.132—‘‘Love Song,’’ Domingo. ccs ines ives 
1 90 “Departure for Hunt; Womns; H, 0. 133 —“‘Sheepeote Interior,””. Verboeckhoren., 
SOIKAS oa eee tee tees se:++-e ~ 5001134-—Psyche and Butterfly.”’ Kray........ 
2 ia Venice; Moran ; M. Mayeresecus 4 on h Bl 135—“‘Winter-Scheveningen,’* Mesdag: Gross. 
ae ace Courtyard,”’ ripe ke Lanthier, (25 1136—‘‘Morning Prayer,” Madrazo ; GoW, 

3— “Fisher Girl,’ ” Knight on ones 450 AAnSleG iy gets ce hot ta ran eet 875 
mete eee 1 angus Vibert.).....+ bal 187—‘Burning Rick,’”’ Breton’ ‘Felix Isman 1,600 
Lago Breet Proposals,” Worms..... ieee 300 Total - t “$74,950 

a i , i PR eee OU aa bis rel were eb tates aie asywinn thats is Falluty isa Caepran ey eee 64,950 
34 Rie Marne,” an: 1 ae 1,000 | Schreyer’s “Retreat” brought the highest 
Wie Map Glade,’ Corot... 5. cules 2,600 |price and was not the most valuable work 
Bes wew Coat,’’ Grison; S. P. Avery. . 300 of the sale. 5 


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